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Volume of fluid method

About: Volume of fluid method is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5338 publications have been published within this topic receiving 116760 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a computational model is constructed of the primary energy losses in a generic switch-mode hydraulic circuit with emphasis on losses created by fluid compressibility, and the model is used in a computational experiment where the system pressure, switched volume, and fraction of air entrained in the hydraulic fluid are varied through multiple levels.
Abstract: Fluid compressibility has a major influence on the efficiency of switch-mode hydraulic circuits due to the release of energy stored in fluid compression during each switching cycle and the increased flow rate through the high-speed valve during transition events. Multiple models existing in the literature for fluid bulk modulus, the inverse of the compressibility, are reviewed and compared with regards to their applicability to a switch-mode circuit. In this work, a computational model is constructed of the primary energy losses in a generic switch-mode hydraulic circuit with emphasis on losses created by fluid compressibility. The model is used in a computational experiment where the system pressure, switched volume, and fraction of air entrained in the hydraulic fluid are varied through multiple levels. The computational experiments resulted in switch-mode circuit volumetric efficiencies that ranged from 51% to 95%. The dominant energy loss is due to throttling through the ports of the high-speed valve during valve transition events. The throttling losses increase with the fraction of entrained air and the volume of fluid experiencing pressure fluctuations, with a smaller overall influence seen as a result of the system pressure. The results of the computational experiment indicate that to achieve high efficiency in switch-mode hydraulic circuits, it is critical to minimize both the entrained air in the hydraulic fluid and the fluid volume between the high-speed valve and the pump, motor, or actuator. These computational results are compared to experimental results in part II of this two part paper series.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a multiphase volume of fluid (VOF) model was developed to provide a more detailed understanding of the transient behavior of a laboratory-scale trickle-bed reactor.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the critical bath level or bath height for this phenomenon is 0.35 m (in this particular ladle design) for a ladle standstill time of 15 minutes and decreases with longer standstill times.
Abstract: Fluid flow dynamics during ladle drainage operations of steel under isothermal and nonisothermal conditions has been studied using the turbulence shear stress transport k-e model (SST k-ω) and the multiphase volume of fluid (VOF) model. At high bath levels, the angular velocity of the melt, close to the ladle nozzle, is small rotating anticlockwise and intense vertical-recirculating flows are developed in most of the liquid volume due to descending steel streams along the ladle vertical wall. These streams ascend further downstream driven by buoyancy forces. At low bath levels, the melt, which is close to the nozzle, rotates clockwise with higher velocities whose magnitudes are higher for shorter ladle standstill times. These velocities are responsible for the formation and development of a vortex on the bath free surface, which entrains slag into the nozzle by shear-stress mechanisms at the metal-slag interface. The critical bath level or bath height for this phenomenon is 0.35 m (in this particular ladle design) for a ladle standstill time of 15 minutes and decreases with longer ladle standstill times. At these steps, the vertical-recirculating flows are substituted by complex horizontal-rotating flows in most of the liquid volume. Under isothermal conditions, the critical bath level for vortex formation on the melt free surface is 0.20 m, which agrees very well with that determined with a 1/3 scale water model of 0.073 m. It is concluded that buoyancy forces, originated by thermal gradients, as the ladle cools, are responsible for increasing the critical bath level for vortex formation. Understanding vortex mechanisms will be useful to design simple and efficient devices to break down the vortex flow during steel draining even at very low metal residues in the ladle.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a three-phase flow model that captures the details of the gas layer thickness and dynamics of fluid motions was proposed to investigate the thickness of the entrapped air during the impact process while the behavior of droplet and immiscible liquid film was quantitatively measured.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of hydrophobicity on cloud cavitation over the Clark-Y hydrofoil under various slip conditions were investigated, and the results showed that as the slip strength grew stronger, the friction drag was reduced; the cavity became longer and the shedding frequency decreased.

34 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023315
2022655
2021352
2020345
2019341
2018323