Calculation of water droplet impingement using the coupled method of rigid body dynamics and the moving particle semi-implicit method Shane Park and Gyoodong Jeun*
The Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology, vol. 25, no. 11, pp.2787-2794, 2011
Abstract : When a liquid droplet impacts on a solid surface, it recoils to the center of that surface after reaching its maximum spreading diameter.
The mechanism of droplet recoiling is not fully understood. To simulate this recoiling of a droplet, a particle method is a good choice
because it does not require grids for simulating fluid motions, and can easily handle a large deformation of fluid. In this study, the coupled
method of rigid body dynamics and the moving particle semi-implicit (MPS) method (Park and Jeun, 2011) was used to calculate
three-dimensional droplet impingement. Also, the previous surface tension model for MPS (Nomura et al., 2001) was revised to get a
more realistic surface tension force. A two-step calculation was performed. In the first step, a MPS calculation was performed with particles
that were considered to have no mass or volume. In the second step, rigid body dynamics came into the calculation and considered
the diameters of particles being slightly lesser than the initial distance between particles. In this study, the calculated results were compared
with the measured data (Kim and Chun, 2000) and the recoiling lengths of droplets for the various initial impingement speeds were
estimated.
Keyword :
Droplet impingement; Droplet recoiling; Moving particle semi-implicit; Particle method; Rigid body dynamics; Surface tension
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