A numerical study of gas focused non-Newtonian micro-jets

•A first numerical study on gas-focused non-Newtonian micro-jets, described by power-law rheology.•New findings on stability, shape, and velocities of such jets.•A detailed analysis of fluid flow patterns in the nozzle and in the jet as a function of the power-law index. The present numerical study...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of multiphase flow Vol. 170; p. 104628
Main Authors Zahoor, Rizwan, Bajt, Saša, Šarler, Božidar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.01.2024
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Summary:•A first numerical study on gas-focused non-Newtonian micro-jets, described by power-law rheology.•New findings on stability, shape, and velocities of such jets.•A detailed analysis of fluid flow patterns in the nozzle and in the jet as a function of the power-law index. The present numerical study assesses the jet length, diameter and velocity of various non-Newtonian power-law fluids of a gas dynamic virtual nozzle. A related two-phase flow problem is formulated within the mixture framework and solved with the finite volume method and volume of fluid interface treatment in axisymmetry. The process parametric range allows the incompressible laminar flow assumption. A comprehensive jet characteristics analysis is carried out in a typical micro-nozzle configuration for a range of shear-thinning to shear-thickening fluids with power law indices 0.5 ≤ n < 1.5, gas mass flow rate of 10 mg/min and liquid volumetric flow rate of 43 µl/min, resulting in a gas Reynolds number of 130 with Reynolds and Weber numbers for a reference water jet being 90 and 10, respectively. It is observed that jets from shear-thinning fluids (0.5 ≤ n < 1.0) tend to be thicker, longer, and slower when compared with the shear-thickening fluids (1.0 < n ≤ 1.5). A dripping-jetting phase diagram of the nozzle is constructed by varying the power law index, gas and liquid flow rates in the range 0.9–1.1, 5–15 mg/min and 5–50 µl/min, respectively. It is observed that the area of stable jetting decreases with the increase of the power law index. The obtained novel information on the behaviour of non-Newtonian gas-focused micro-jets provides a possible new dimension for tailoring the serial crystallography sample delivery systems where the micro-jets carry dispersed crystals into an X-ray beam. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0301-9322
1879-3533
DOI:10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2023.104628