Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics (Dec 2023)
Numerical modelling and theoretical analysis of the acoustic attenuation in bubbly liquids
Abstract
The propagations of acoustic waves in bubbly liquids have been extensively investigated through experimental and theoretical methods, a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) method was introduced to investigate the acoustic attenuation through bubbles in this study. Numerical ‘measurements’ of attenuation coefficient (α) and phase velocity (V) were conducted using a homogeneous cavitation model, which were modeled from experimental schemes and compared with the theoretical results. At extremely small bubble volume fraction (β around 10−11), new formulas of the theoretical α (αtheo) were proposed respectively for linear and transient oscillations, and a new formula of the numerical α (αnum) was proposed for transient oscillations. Results showed that αnum matched precisely with αtheo for linear, nonlinear and transient oscillations. At medium β (around 10−4), the relative difference of αnum between the VOF and present methods was less than 1.6%, while it reached 15.4% after replacing the bounded Keller-Miksis equation (KME) in the present method with the KME. However, the traditional theoretical α and V matched precisely with the predictions by the present method with the KME. Thus new theoretical α and V were proposed based on the bounded KME, and the relative differences between αtheo and αnum were less than 1%. It can be concluded that the bounded KME should be used in both numerical and theoretical predictions.
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