Mixture pressure and stress in disperse two-phase flow

Citation
M. Marchioro et al., Mixture pressure and stress in disperse two-phase flow, INT J MULT, 25(6-7), 1999, pp. 1395-1429
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Mechanical Engineering
Journal title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTIPHASE FLOW
ISSN journal
03019322 → ACNP
Volume
25
Issue
6-7
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1395 - 1429
Database
ISI
SICI code
0301-9322(199909/11)25:6-7<1395:MPASID>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
The definition and interpretation of average pressure in an incompressible disperse two-phase flow are ambiguous and have been the object of debate in the literature. For example, the physical meaning of definitions involving an internal 'pressure Inside rigid particles is unclear. The appearance of the particle internal stresses in averaged equations of the two-fluid type s is similarly puzzling as, provided the particles are sufficiently rigid, the precise numerical value of such stresses would not be expected to affec t the flow. This paper deals with these matters using a new approach. A pro per definition of mixture pressure follows quite naturally by identifying t he isotropic component of the mixture stress that - just like the usual pre ssure in incompressible single-phase flow - is covariant under the gauge tr ansformation p --> p + psi, where psi can be thought of as the potential of body forces. This transformation includes as special cases the more usual gauge transformation p --> p + Pi(t), with Pi(t) an arbitrary function of t ime, and p --> p - rho g.x, by which gravitational effects are removed from the single-phase equations. The mixture pressure that is identified on the basis of this argument contains the pressure averaged over the surface of the particles, as in some earlier proposals, but also other terms. Explicit examples are given for the case of dilute potential and Stokes flows of sp heres. It is also shown that it is possible to completely eliminate the dis perse-phase stress field from the averaged equations provided the particle motion is only expressed in terms of the center-of-mass and angular velocit y. Finally, the implications for the closure of the averaged equations that derive from the concept of covariance under the general gauge transformati on are discussed. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.