4.7 Article

Phase separation in thermal systems: A lattice Boltzmann study and morphological characterization

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 84, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.84.046715

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Science Foundations of LCP
  2. Science Foundations of CAEP [2009A0102005, 2011A0201002]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11075021, 11074303, 11074300]
  4. National Basic Research Program (973 Program) [2007CB815105]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central University [2010YS03]
  6. Technology Support Program of LangFang [2010011029/30/31]
  7. Science Foundation of NCIAE [2008-KY-13, KY-2010-06]

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We investigate thermal and isothermal symmetric liquid-vapor separations via a fast Fourier transform thermal lattice Boltzmann (FFT-TLB) model. Structure factor, domain size, and Minkowski functionals are employed to characterize the density and velocity fields, as well as to understand the configurations and the kinetic processes. Compared with the isothermal phase separation, the freedom in temperature prolongs the spinodal decomposition (SD) stage and induces different rheological and morphological behaviors in the thermal system. After the transient procedure, both the thermal and isothermal separations show power-law scalings in domain growth, while the exponent for thermal system is lower than that for isothermal system. With respect to the density field, the isothermal system presents more likely bicontinuous configurations with narrower interfaces, while the thermal system presents more likely configurations with scattered bubbles. Heat creation, conduction, and lower interfacial stresses are the main reasons for the differences in thermal system. Different from the isothermal case, the release of latent heat causes the changing of local temperature, which results in new local mechanical balance. When the Prandtl number becomes smaller, the system approaches thermodynamical equilibrium much more quickly. The increasing of mean temperature makes the interfacial stress lower in the following way: sigma = sigma(0)[(T-c - T)/(T-c - T-0)](3/2), where Tc is the critical temperature and sigma(0) is the interfacial stress at a reference temperature T-0, which is the main reason for the prolonged SD stage and the lower growth exponent in the thermal case. Besides thermodynamics, we probe how the local viscosities influence the morphology of the phase separating system. We find that, for both the isothermal and thermal cases, the growth exponents and local flow velocities are inversely proportional to the corresponding viscosities. Compared with the isothermal case, the local flow velocity depends not only on viscosity but also on temperature.

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