Yi Tianhao, Qiu Yinan, Xu Yuanyuan, et al. Numerical Simulation of Dynamic Capillary Rise with Cryogenic Fluids under Microgravity[J]. Journal of Refrigeration, 2023, 44(4).
DOI:
Yi Tianhao, Qiu Yinan, Xu Yuanyuan, et al. Numerical Simulation of Dynamic Capillary Rise with Cryogenic Fluids under Microgravity[J]. Journal of Refrigeration, 2023, 44(4). DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4339.2023.04.141.
Numerical Simulation of Dynamic Capillary Rise with Cryogenic Fluids under Microgravity
Spacecraft use surface tension to transport liquid fuel and continuously provide gas-free propellants to engines. To ensure the normal operation of spacecraft
it is important to study the capillary flow behavior of liquid propellants. In this study
the capillary rise process was simulated using a single capillary tube
and the gas-liquid interface was captured using the phase-field method. A two-dimensional axisymmetric model of capillary rise was built and solved using the finite element method. To validate the model
numerical results were compared with those calculated using Jurin’s law and the Lucas-Washburn model. The relative errors were 4.44% and 5.21%
respectively
which confirmed the feasibility of the model for simulating the dynamic capillary rise process. Based on the verified model
the height and velocity of the capillary flow were investigated using different gravitational accelerations and cryogenic fluids. The results showed that when the effective gravity was small
the capillary rise process could be divided into three stages: purely inertial
inertial-viscous
and purely viscous. When the effective gravity is high
the capillary rise process can be divided into four stages
because the gravity of the liquid in the tube cannot be ignored. The four stages are purely inertial
inertial-viscous
viscous-gravitational
and purely gravitational. In addition
the height and velocity of the capillary flow decreased as the effective gravity increased. In the initial stage
the higher the surface tension of the cryogenic fluid
the greater the rising height and velocity. As the liquid level increases
the viscous force gradually increases. The velocity of the capillary flow with liquid hydrogen exceeded that with water