Magazine Article

Irreversible Entropy Production in Two-Phase Mixing Layers

TBMG-1362

02/01/2003

Abstract
Content

This report presents a study of dissipation (irreversible production of entropy) in three-dimensional, temporal mixing layers laden with evaporating liquid drops. The purpose of the study is to examine the effects of evaporating drops on the development of turbulent features in flows. Direct numerical simulations were performed to analyze transitional states of three mixing layers: one without drops, and two that included drops at different initial mass loadings. Without drops, the dissipation is essentially due to viscous effects. It was found that in the presence of drops, the largest contribution to dissipation was made by heating and evaporation of the drops, and that at large length scales, this contribution is positive (signifying that the drops reduce turbulence), while at small scales, this contribution is negative (the drops increase turbulence). The second largest contribution to dissipation was found to be associated with the chemical potential, which leads to an increase in turbulence at large scales and a decrease in turbulence at small scales. The next smaller contribution was found to be that of viscosity. The fact that viscosity effects are only third in order of magnitude in the dissipation is in sharp contrast to the situation for the mixing layer without the drops. The next smaller contribution — that of the drag and momentum of the vapor from the drops — was found to be negative at lower mass loading but to become positive at higher mass loading.

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Citation
"Irreversible Entropy Production in Two-Phase Mixing Layers," Mobility Engineering, February 1, 2003.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 2003
Product Code
TBMG-1362
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English