Abstract

The paper describes application of the mesoscopic lattice Boltzmann (LB) method to the simulations of both single-phase turbulence and particle-laden turbulence which are maintained by a large-scale forcing. The disturbance flows around finite-size solid particles are resolved, providing the opportunity to study the detailed interactions between fluid turbulence and solid particles at the particle–fluid interfaces. Specifically, a nonuniform time-dependent stochastic forcing scheme is implemented within the mesoscopic multiple-relaxation-time LB approach. The statistics of single-phase forced turbulence obtained from the LB approach are found to be in excellent agreement with those from the pseudo-spectral simulations, provided that the grid resolution in the LB simulation is doubled. It is shown that the flow statistics is not sensitive to the velocity scale used for the LB simulation. Preliminary results on forced turbulence laden with non-sedimenting solid particles at a particle-to-fluid density ratio of 5, solid volume fraction of 0.102, and particle diameter to Kolmogorov length ratio of 8.05 are interpreted, using a systematic analysis conducted at three levels: whole-field, phase-partitioned, and profiles as a function of distance from the surface of solid particles. It is found that the particle-laden turbulence is much more dissipative in terms of the non-dimensional dissipation rate, due to both reduction of the effective flow Reynolds number and the viscous boundary layer on the surfaces of solid particles. The thickness of the boundary layer is found to be about 0.4rp. While this boundary layer region accounts for 19.5% of the space within the fluid, it contributes to 57.5% of total viscous dissipation. The vorticity magnitude exhibits a maximum inside the boundary layer and a minimum outside the boundary layer, showing detachment of the vorticity structure from the solid surface. The sharp gradients near the particle surface contribute dominantly to the value of velocity derivative flatness, making the flatness in particle-laden flow much larger than that of single-phase turbulence. In the spectral space, presence of solid particles attenuates energy at large scales including the forcing shells and augments energy at the small scales. The pivot wavenumber is found to be very similar to the value previously found in decaying particle-laden turbulence under the similar parameter setting.

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