09 décembre 2021

Webinar Michael Gorokhovski

Doctor (1981) in physics and mathematics, Mikhael Gorokhovski worked for ten years at the State University of Kazakhstan. Since 1991, he has been carrying out his research and teaching in France at the University of Rouen, where he was appointed university professor in 1995. Since 2006, he has been a professor at the École Centrale de Lyon where he teaches fluid mechanics and combustion. In his research at LMFA - UMR 5509, he focuses on understanding the statistical physics of turbulence in the presence of different phases. At ERCOFTAC (European Research Community on Flow, Turbulence and Combustion), Mikhael Gorokhovski is coordinator of the Center Henri Bénard. He is also a member of the Russian Science Foundation Expert Panel, Editorial Fellow of the journal Atomization and Sprays, and a guest member of the Editorial Board of the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics. Among his stays abroad, he was Senior Fellow at Stanford University 2000-2001.
Statistical models of a droplet in the highly intermittent turbulence: breakup, dynamics and evaporation.

Abstract: In many problems of fluid dynamics, the Reynolds number is large and the flow structure is highly irregular – the localized velocity gradients may attain extreme values. This is a manifestation of strongly stretched and long-lived structures generated in narrow regions of the flow. The interactions of these structures, referred to as intermittency effects on turbulent microscales, lead to intense fluctuations of the energy dissipation rate, to violent accelerations of fluid particles, and to long-range auto-correlations. If such a flow is laden by droplets, the intermittency effects may have a strong impact on breakup, dynamics and evaporation of droplets. However in LES, the microscale turbulent properties are under-resolved. In this talk we will discuss how the intermittency effects in the residual scales can be introduced for practical simulations of atomizing and evaporating sprays. To this end, the new stochastic models of a liquid spray are developed and assessed.

09 décembre 2021, 16h3017h30
Please contact F. Romano for the link