Fluid Flow Effects In Electromagnetically Levitated Droplets

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Robert W. Hyers
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
11
File Size:
1400 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

Electromagnetic levitation has proven important in a wide range of experiments, all affected by fluid flow. For some experiments such as viscosity measurements, only whether the flow is laminar or turbulent must be established. For other experiments, however, quantitative assessments of velocity, shear stress, or shear strain rate are required. In most cases it is difficult or impossible to measure the internal flow in levitated droplets directly. The samples are usually small, opaque, reactive, high-temperature, metastable, or all of these. Furthermore, recirculating flow limits the utility of tracking surface particles, since they collect in stagnation points ratherthan following the flow. Most research groups have chosen mathematical modeling to assess the internal flow in levitated droplets. A variety of analytical and numerical methods have been applied, including both laminar flow and various turbulence models. A number of these models are reviewed and their impact on different containerless experiments is assessed. Much of the research reviewed here was performed by alumni of Professor Julian Szekely, and by others using similar methods.
Citation

APA: Robert W. Hyers  (2006)  Fluid Flow Effects In Electromagnetically Levitated Droplets

MLA: Robert W. Hyers Fluid Flow Effects In Electromagnetically Levitated Droplets. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2006.

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