Modeling Emulsions
An emulsion is a dispersion of small droplets of one liquid in another liquid, where the droplets are not soluble or miscible. To model the non-Newtonian viscosity of such a fluid, use the Emulsion Rheology model.
The steps in this procedure are intended to follow on from Step 3 in Modeling Bubbly and Droplet Flows.
The Emulsion Rheology model is used when both the continuous phase and the dispersed phase are liquids.
The relative viscosity is a strong function of volume fraction, so it is sensitive to small variations of volume fraction in the simulation. You are advised to run the Emulsion Rheology model as unsteady with a small time-step, and use an initial volume fraction that is below the maximum packing.
When you use the Emulsion Rheology model, you can set the appropriate material properties to define the behavior of the multiphase material.
To model emulsions:
- Select the Emulsion Rheology node and set the Maximum Packing property value.
- Select the Calibration Prefactor child node and specify the calibration value.
-
Select the
Anisotropy Tensor child node and specify the tensor.
See Anisotropy Tensor.
-
Expand the
node and set the following material properties:
- Normal Relative Viscosity
-
Osmotic Pressure
The Hard Sphere Osmotic Pressure option is temperature-dependent. To make this option available, select an energy model for the individual phases or assign the Segregated Fluid Isothermal model to each phase.
- Relative Viscosity
- Relaxation Time
- Surface Tension
- Yield Relative Viscosity
- Yield Stress
-
Expand the
node and select the appropriate Drag Force model.
The Emulsion Rheology model uses the Linearized Emulsion Topology Inversion Drag Force model.
Return to Modeling Bubbly and Droplet Flows and continue with Step 4.