The calculation of the instantaneous fluid velocity, in Equation 6–6, depends on the flow regime and the type of particle tracking desired
(mean or with turbulent dispersion). In laminar flows or in flows
where mean particle tracking is calculated,
is
equal to the mean local fluid velocity,
, surrounding the particle. The path of a particle
is deterministic (that is, there is a unique path for a particle injected
at a given location in the flow).
In turbulent tracking, the instantaneous fluid velocity is decomposed
into mean, , and fluctuating,
, components. Now particle trajectories
are not deterministic and two identical particles, injected from
a single point, at different times, may follow separate trajectories
due to the random nature of the instantaneous fluid velocity.
It is the fluctuating component of the fluid velocity that causes
the dispersion of particles in a turbulent flow.
The model of turbulent dispersion of particles that is used,
which is due to Gosman and Ioannides [147], assumes that a particle is always within
a single turbulent eddy. Each eddy has a characteristic fluctuating
velocity, , lifetime,
, and length, l
e. When a particle enters the
eddy, the fluctuating velocity for that eddy is added to the local
mean fluid velocity to obtain the instantaneous fluid velocity used
in Equation 6–19. The turbulent
fluid velocity,
, is assumed to prevail as long as the particle/eddy
interaction time is less than the eddy lifetime and the displacement
of the particle relative to the eddy is less than the eddy length.
If either of these conditions is exceeded, the particle is assumed
to be entering a new eddy with new characteristic
,
, and l
e.
The turbulent velocity, eddy length and lifetime are calculated based on the local turbulence properties of the flow:
(6–33) |
(6–34) |
where k and are the local
turbulent kinetic energy and dissipation, respectively, and
is a turbulence constant. The factor
was chosen
to relate the characteristic length scale to the eddy dissipation
length [39]. The variable
is a normally distributed random
number which accounts for the randomness of turbulence about a mean
value. Because of this randomness, each component of the fluctuating
velocity
may
have a different value in each eddy.