4.7 Article

Orientation instability of settling spheroids in a linearly density-stratified fluid

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 929, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.836

Keywords

particle; fluid flow; stratified flows

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-1604423, CBET-1705371, ACI-1548562, TG-CTS190041]
  2. FORMAS (Swedish research council for sustainable development)

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Numerical simulations show that oblate and prolate spheroids reorient to edge-wise and partially edge-wise orientations, respectively, when settling in a stratified fluid, which is different from the steady broad-side on orientation observed in a homogeneous fluid.
Much work has been done to understand the settling dynamics of spherical particles in a homogeneous and stratified fluid. However, the effects of shape anisotropy on the settling dynamics of a particle in a stratified fluid are not completely understood. To this end, we perform numerical simulations for settling oblate and prolate spheroids in a stratified fluid. We present the results for the Galileo number, , in the range 80-250 and the Richardson number, , in the range 0-10. We find that both the oblate and prolate spheroids reorient to the edge-wise and partially edge-wise orientations, respectively, as they settle in a stratified fluid completely different from the steady-state broad-side on orientation observed in a homogeneous fluid. We observe that reorientation instabilities emerge when the velocity magnitudes of the spheroids fall below a particular threshold. We also report the enhancement of the drag on the particle from stratification. The torque due to buoyancy effects tries to orient the spheroid in an edge-wise orientation while the hydrodynamic torque tries to orient it to a broad-side on orientation. Below the velocity threshold, the buoyancy torque dominates; resulting in the onset of reorientation instability. Finally, the asymmetry in the distribution of the baroclinic vorticity generation term around the spheroids explains the onset of the reorientation instability.

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