Journal Article


New insights on cavitating flows over a microscale backward-facing step

Abstract

This study introduces the first experimental analysis of shear cavitation in a microscale backward-facing step (BFS) configuration. It explores shear layer cavitation under various flow conditions in a microfluidic device with a depth of 60 μm and a step height of 400 μm. The BFS configuration, with its unique characteristics of upstream turbulence and post-reattachment pressure recovery, provides a controlled environment for studying shear-induced cavitation without the complexities of other microfluidic geometries. Experiments were conducted across four flow patterns: inception, developing, shedding, and intense shedding, by varying upstream pressure and the Reynolds number. The study highlights key differences between microscale and macroscale shear cavitation, such as the dominant role of surface forces on nuclei distribution, vapor formation, and distinct timescales for phenomena like shedding and shockwave propagation. It is hypothesized that vortex strength in the shear layer plays a significant role in cavity shedding during upstream shockwave propagation. Results indicate that increased pressure notably elevates the mean thickness, length, and intensity within the shear layer. Instantaneous data analysis identified two vortex modes (shedding and wake modes) at the reattachment zone, which significantly affect cavitation shedding frequency and downstream penetration. The wake mode, characterized by stronger and lower-frequency vortices, transports cavities deeper into the channel compared to the shedding mode. Additionally, vortex strength, proportional to the Reynolds number, affects condensation caused by shockwaves. The study confirms that nuclei concentration peaks in the latter half of the shear layer during cavitation inception, aligning with the peak void fraction region.

Attached files

Authors

Maleki, Mohammadamin
Talabazar, Farzad Rokhsar
Toyran, Erçil
Priyadarshi, Abhinav
Aghdam, Araz Sheibani
Villanueva, Luis Guillermo
Grishenkov, Dmitry
Tzanakis, Iakovos
Koşar, Ali
Ghorbani, Morteza

Oxford Brookes departments

School of Engineering, Computing and Mathematics

Dates

Year of publication: 2024
Date of RADAR deposit: 2024-09-19



“This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Physics of Fluids 36, 093335 (2024) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0225030.


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