| Literature DB >> 28773532 |
Sven De Schampheleire1, Kathleen De Kerpel2, Bernd Ameel3, Peter De Jaeger4, Ozer Bagci5, Michel De Paepe6.
Abstract
It is long known that for high-velocity fluid flow in porous media, the relation between the pressure drop and the superficial velocity is not linear. Indeed, the classical Darcy law for shear stress dominated flow needs to be extended with a quadratic term, resulting in the empirical Darcy-Forchheimer model. Another approach is to simulate the foam numerically through the volume averaging technique. This leads to a natural separation of the total drag force into the contribution of the shear forces and the contribution of the pressure forces. Both representations of the total drag lead to the same result. The physical correspondence between both approaches is investigated in this work. The contribution of the viscous and pressure forces on the total drag is investigated using direct numerical simulations. Special attention is paid to the dependency on the velocity of these forces. The separation of the drag into its constituent terms on experimental grounds and for the volume average approach is unified. It is shown that the common approach to identify the linear term with the viscous forces and the quadratic term with the pressure forces is not correct.Entities:
Keywords: Darcy; Forchheimer; inertial coefficient; metal foam; permeability; pressure drop; volume averaging theory
Year: 2016 PMID: 28773532 PMCID: PMC5456810 DOI: 10.3390/ma9060409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1The nomenclature of an open-cell metal foam and its strut thickness variation.
Figure 2Contribution of the Darcy and Forchheimer term to the pressure gradient for a foam with following dimensions: and .
Figure 3Illustration of the REV (a) and PUC (b) of the foam with dimensions: and .
Determination of grid discretization error for a pressure gradient of 100 Pa over the PUC.
| Coarse Mesh (Start Size: 5 µm) | Finer Mesh (Start Size: 4.5 µm) | Finest Mesh (Start Size: 4 µm) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3% | 7.2% | ||||
| 6% | 15.4% | ||||
| 1.9% | 8.7% | ||||
| 1.2% | 3.44% |
Results for the permeability and inertial coefficient based on the numerical calculation method.
| 0.02244 | 0.02982 | 1.682 × 10−6 | 8.600 × 10−7 | 28,744 | 28,062 |
| 0.04581 | 0.05889 | 1.682 × 10−6 | 8.600 × 10−7 | 14,374 | 14,037 |
| 0.08834 | 0.1178 | 1.682 × 10−6 | 8.600 × 10−7 | 7191.5 | 7029.9 |
| 0.2225 | 0.2977 | 1.681 × 10−6 | 8.580 × 10−7 | 2888.6 | 2843 |
| 0.4450 | 0.5857 | 1.680 × 10−6 | 8.510 × 10−7 | 1464.6 | 1472.7 |
| 2.0384 | 2.4474 | 1.664 × 10−6 | 7.820 × 10−7 | 360.79 | 444.38 |
| 3.7659 | 4.2338 | 1.663 × 10−6 | 7.380 × 10−7 | 218.26 | 311.63 |
| 5.3462 | 5.7618 | 1.654 × 10−6 | 7.130 × 10−7 | 165.99 | 260.38 |
| 6.8218 | 7.1327 | 1.649 × 10−6 | 6.950 × 10−7 | 138.24 | 231.67 |
| 8.2059 | 8.3926 | 1.645 × 10−6 | 6.810 × 10−7 | 120.93 | 212.72 |
| 11.9227 | 11.7460 | 1.639 × 10−6 | 6.530 × 10−7 | 94.22 | 180.00 |
| 14.0919 | 13.7320 | 1.637 × 10−6 | 6.400 × 10−7 | 85.39 | 167.31 |
| 22.5039 | 21.8332 | 1.632 × 10−6 | 5.960 × 10−7 | 69.85 | 138.94 |
| 33.5792 | 33.0721 | 1.620 × 10−6 | 5.430 × 10−7 | 65.65 | 126.75 |
Figure 4The permeability in the x and y direction ( and ) determined through numerical calculations plotted against the Reynolds number.
Figure 5The inertial coefficient in the x and y direction ( and ) determined through numerical calculations plotted against the Reynolds number.
Results for the pressure and viscous forces acting on the PUC for different Reynolds numbers.
| 0.02243 | 1.77 × 10−9 | 8.14 × 10−10 | 0.315 |
| 0.0458 | 3.54 × 10−9 | 1.63 × 10−9 | 0.315 |
| 0.0883 | 7.08 × 10−9 | 3.26 × 10−9 | 0.315 |
| 0.2225 | 1.77 × 10−8 | 8.13 × 10−9 | 0.315 |
| 0.4450 | 3.55 × 10−8 | 1.62 × 10−8 | 0.313 |
| 2.0384 | 1.84 × 10−7 | 7.48 × 10−8 | 0.290 |
| 3.7659 | 3.79 × 10−7 | 1.38 × 10−7 | 0.267 |
| 5.3462 | 5.8 × 10−7 | 1.95 × 10−7 | 0.251 |
| 6.8219 | 7.87 × 10−7 | 2.47 × 10−7 | 0.239 |
| 8.2059 | 9.96 × 10−7 | 2.96 × 10−7 | 0.229 |
| 11.9227 | 1.64 × 10−6 | 4.29 × 10−7 | 0.208 |
| 14.0920 | 2.07 × 10−6 | 5.1 × 10−7 | 0.197 |
| 22.5040 | 4.33 × 10−6 | 8.42 × 10−7 | 0.163 |
| 33.5792 | 9.05 × 10−6 | 1.28 × 10−6 | 0.124 |
Figure 6The pressure force in the x-direction is plotted against the Reynolds number.
Figure 7Illustration of the boundary conditions for the staggered case with circles.
Figure 8Illustration of the influence against the velocity of the viscous forces to the total forces acting on the surface of the foam.
Figure 9Illustration of the influence against the velocity of the viscous forces to the total forces acting on the surface of the foam for the staggered circle layout and two different viscosities.