2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session D9: Focus Session: Turbulence
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 10, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: RO7
Sponsoring
Unit:
DFD
Chair: Haitao Xu, Gesellschaft fuer wissenschaftliche Datenverarbeitung mbH Goettingen
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.D9.4
Abstract: D9.00004 : Particle Dynamics in Turbulence
3:06 PM–3:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Haitao Xu
(Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization)
The interaction between particles and turbulence features in many
environmental and engineering problems, e.g., the formation of
rain, the dispersion of particulate pollutants, and sedimentation
in rivers and oceans. In addition, tracer particles are routinely
used in scientific research to study the flow itself.
Understanding the behavior of particles in turbulent flows is not
only an important practical problem, but also an intriguing
scientific challenge.
Our group has developed a three-dimensional Lagrangian Particle
Tracking (LPT) system. Using high speed CMOS cameras, the system
is capable of following simultaneously hundreds of particles in a
turbulent flow with Taylor microscale Reynolds number $R_{\lambda}$
up to $10^3$. The LPT measurements provide both single- and
multi-particle statistics following Lagrangian trajectories, at
temporal resolutions better than the Kolmogorov time scales of
the turbulence.
Using the LPT system, we investigated the Lagrangian properties
of turbulence by tracking tracer particles seeded in the flow. In
the study of turbulent relative dispersion, our measurement of
the separation of pairs of fluid elements in turbulence
demonstrated that only when the separation between a time scale
related to the initial separation between the pair and the
turbulence integral time scale is large enough, or equivalently,
at very large Reynolds numbers, the long-believed Richardson's
$t^3$ law may be observed. Furthermore, measurements of multiple
particles in the flow showed the evolution of geometric
structures in turbulence.
Due to its ability to follow individual particles, the LPT system
is an ideal tool to study the behavior of
non-tracer particles in turbulence. The inertial particles have
density different from the fluid, but size smaller than the
Kolmogorov length scale of turbulence. On the other hand,
neutrally buoyant particles with size larger than the Kolmogorov
scale behave very differently from inertial particles. We will
present results from both cases.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.D9.4