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Impact zone dynamics of dilute mono- and polydisperse jets and their implications for the initial conditions of pyroclastic density currents
The fluid dynamics at the impact zone of an impinging jet dictate the initial conditions for the resulting downstream flow. Current understanding of this impact zone is limited to small scale, single phase, or monodisperse impinging jet experiments with a focus on industrial and engineering applicat...
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Published in: | Physics of fluids (1994) 2017-09, Vol.29 (9) |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The fluid dynamics at the impact zone of an impinging jet dictate the initial conditions
for the resulting downstream flow. Current understanding of this impact zone is limited to
small scale, single phase, or monodisperse impinging jet experiments with a focus on
industrial and engineering applications. Here, we present multifield numerical modeling
results of mono- and polydisperse impinging jets with length scales and physical
parameters relevant to large explosive volcanic eruptions. Our modeling shows that
particle behavior is sensitive to whether a jet is monodisperse or polydisperse. For a
monodisperse jet, the downstream flow behavior can be predicted by the coupling between
the particles and gas, which we characterize by a form of the Stokes number (St
imp) where the time scale of changes in fluid motion
is defined by the length scale and velocity change associated with vertical deceleration
as a mixture approaches an impact surface. We find that the length scale of deceleration
is sensitive to the mixture Mach number, as high Mach number flows produce standing shocks
upstream of the impact site. For low St
imp
monodisperse cases, the particles make the transition from axial to radial flow easily,
and the flow continues downstream relatively unimpeded and well mixed. In contrast, in
situations where the monodisperse particles are sufficiently poorly coupled (high St
imp), the particles rebound and/or concentrate at the
impact zone, which results in a radial acceleration of gas as it is expelled from the
concentrating mixture. In polydisperse jets, larger particles become better coupled to the
gas in the free jet zone when in the presence of smaller, well-coupled particles due to
particle-particle drag. However, the larger particles still lose significant momentum in
the impact zone, which results in a lag effect where the smaller particles and gas are
expelled and advance radially at a greater velocity. Although the simulations are
simplified compared with real volcanic eruption scenarios, the results suggest that
processes in the impact zone contribute directly to the formation of different types of
gas-particle flows (concentrated versus dilute) that move outward across the ground. |
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ISSN: | 1070-6631 1089-7666 |
DOI: | 10.1063/1.5004197 |