Wall-induced forces on a rigid sphere at finite Reynolds number Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • We perform direct numerical simulations of a rigid sphere translating parallel to a flat wall in an otherwise quiescent ambient fluid. A spectral element method is employed to perform the simulations with high accuracy. For Re < 100, we observe the lift coefficient to decrease with both Reynolds number and distance from the wall. In this regime the present results are in good agreement with the low-Reynolds-number theory of Vasseur & Cox (1977), with the recent experiments of Takemura & Magnaudet (2003) and with the simulations of Kim et al. (t993). The most surprising result from the present simulations is that the wall-induced lift coefficient increases dramatically with increasing Re above about 100. Detailed analysis of the flow field around the sphere suggests that this increase is due to an imperfect bifurcation resulting in the formation of a double-threaded wake vortical structure. In addition to a non-rotating sphere, we also simulate a freely rotating sphere in order to assess the importance of free rotation on the translational motion of the sphere. We observe the effect of sphere rotation on lift and drag forces to be small. We also explore the effect of the wall on the onset of unsteadiness. 2005 Cambridge University Press.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • Zeng, L. Y., Balachandar, S., & Fischer, P.

citation count

  • 177

complete list of authors

  • Zeng, LY||Balachandar, S||Fischer, P

publication date

  • August 2005