Vortex Formation in a Shock-Accelerated Gas Induced by Particle Seeding

Peter Vorobieff, Michael Anderson, Joseph Conroy, Ross White, C. Randall Truman, and Sanjay Kumar
Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 184503 – Published 4 May 2011

Abstract

An instability forms in gas of constant density (air) with an initial nonuniform seeding of small particles or droplets as a planar shock wave passes through the two-phase medium. The seeding nonuniformity is produced by vertical injection of a slow-moving jet of air premixed with glycol droplets or smoke particles into the test section of a shock tube, with the plane of the shock parallel to the axis of the jet. After the shock passage, two counterrotating vortices form in the plane normal to that axis. The physical mechanism of the instability we observe is peculiar to multiphase flow, where the shock acceleration causes the second (embedded) phase to move with respect to the embedding medium. With sufficient seeding concentration, this leads to entrainment of the embedding phase that acquires a relative velocity dependent on the initial seeding, resulting in vortex formation in the flow.

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  • Received 4 November 2010

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.184503

© 2011 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Peter Vorobieff, Michael Anderson, Joseph Conroy, Ross White, and C. Randall Truman

  • Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of New Mexico, New Mexico 87131, USA

Sanjay Kumar

  • Department of Engineering, University of Texas - Brownsville, Texas 78520, USA

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Issue

Vol. 106, Iss. 18 — 6 May 2011

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