- Series
- Applied and Computational Mathematics Seminar
- Time
- Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - 2:05pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Dr. Mehdi Vahab – Florida State University Math
- Organizer
- Martin Short
An adaptive hybrid level set moment-of-fluid method is developed to study
the material solidification of static and dynamic multiphase systems. The
main focus is on the solidification of water droplets, which may undergo
normal or supercooled freezing. We model the different regimes of freezing
such as supercooling, nucleation, recalescence, isothermal freezing and
solid cooling accordingly to capture physical dynamics during impact and
solidification of water droplets onto solid surfaces. The numerical
simulations are validated by comparison to analytical results and
experimental observations. The present simulations demonstrate the ability
of the method to capture sharp solidification front, handle contact line
dynamics, and the simultaneous impact, merging and freezing of a drop.
Parameter studies have been conducted, which show the influence of the
Stefan number on the regularity of the shape of frozen droplets. Also, it
is shown that impacting droplets with different sizes create ice shapes
which are uniform near the impact point and become dissimilar away from it.
In addition, surface wettability determines whether droplets freeze upon
impact or bounce away.