A finite-size correction model for two-fluid large-eddy simulation of particle-laden boundary layer flow
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5853741
DOI10.1017/jfm.2021.4zbMath1461.76486arXiv2007.10201OpenAlexW3133702276MaRDI QIDQ5853741
Tian-Jian Hsu, Antoine Mathieu, C. Bonamy, Julien Chauchat, Guillaume Balarac
Publication date: 11 March 2021
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2007.10201
Related Items
A frictional–collisional model for bedload transport based on kinetic theory of granular flows: discrete and continuum approaches, Incorporating grain-scale processes in macroscopic sediment transport models. A review and perspectives for environmental and geophysical applications, Numerical investigation of unsteady effects in oscillatory sheet flows
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Motion of inertial particles with size larger than Kolmogorov scale in turbulent flows
- Equilibrium Eulerian approach for predicting the thermal field of a dispersion of small particles
- The role of meso-scale structures in rapid gas–solid flows
- Turbulent Dispersed Multiphase Flow
- On two-phase sediment transport: sheet flow of massive particles
- On multiphase turbulence models for collisional fluid–particle flows
- Equation of motion for a small rigid sphere in a nonuniform flow
- Direct numerical simulation of turbulent channel flow up to Reτ=590
- Finite-size effects in the dynamics of neutrally buoyant particles in turbulent flow
- A dynamic subgrid-scale eddy viscosity model
- A Lagrangian dynamic subgrid-scale model of turbulence
- Particle–fluid interactions in a plane near-wall turbulent flow
- Measurement of particle accelerations in fully developed turbulence
- Practical Computational Fluid Dynamics with the Finite Volume Method
- Acceleration statistics of finite-sized particles in turbulent flow: the role of Faxén forces
- Partitioning of particle velocities in gas–solid turbulent flows into a continuous field and a spatially uncorrelated random distribution: theoretical formalism and numerical study
- A fast Eulerian method for disperse two-phase flow