Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-767nl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-13T22:12:21.313Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A theory of turbulent flow round two-dimensional bluff bodies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2006

J. C. R. Hunt
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge

Abstract

By generalizing the theory of ‘rapid distortion’ of turbulence developed by Batchelor & Proudman (1954) it is shown in this paper that the turbulent velocity around a bluff body placed in a turbulent flow can be calculated outside and upstream of the regions of separated flow, if the incident turbulent flow satisfies the following conditions: (i) if a/Lx [Lt ] 1 or = O(1), Re−1$u^{\prime}_{\infty}/\overline{u}_{\infty} $ [Lt ] 1 [Lt ] Re½; (ii) if a/Lx [Gt ] 1, Re−1 [Lt ] $u^{\prime}_{\infty}$ [Lt ] 1/(a/Lx) and Re [Gt ] (a/Lx)2, where $Re = \overline{u}_{\infty} a/ν$, is the mean uniform incident velocity, $u^{\prime}_{\infty}$ is the r.m.s. velocity of the homogeneous incident turbulence, a is a transverse dimension of the body (the radius in the case of a circular cylinder), Lx is the integral scale of the incident turbulence and v is the kinematic viscosity.

Detailed calculations are given for the flow around a circular cylinder with particular emphasis on the turbulence very close to the surface. (The results can be generalized to other cylindrical bodies.) Mean-square values and spectra of velocity have been found only in the limiting situations where the turbulence scale is very much larger or smaller than the size of the body, i.e. Lx [Gt ] a or Lx [Lt ] a. But, whatever the value of a/Lx, if the frequency is sufficiently large the results for spectra tend to those of the limiting situation where Lx [Lt ] a. The reason why the turbulence velocities have not been calculated for intermediate values of a/Lx is that closed-form solutions cannot be found and that the computing time then required is quite excessive. However, some computed results are used in the paper to suggest the qualitative behaviour of the turbulence when Lx is of order a. An important result of the theory is that it illuminates and distinguishes between the governing physical processes of distortion of the turbulence by the mean flow, the direct ‘blocking’ of the turbulence by the body, and concentration of vortex lines at the body's surface.

The results of the theory have many applications, for example in calculating turbulent dispersion and fluctuating pressures on the body, as shown elsewhere by Hunt & Mulhearn (1973) and Hunt (1973).

In conclusion the theoretical results are briefly compared with experimental measurements of turbulent flows round non-circular cylinders. A detailed comparison with measurements round circular cylinders will be published later by Petty (1974).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1973 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abramowitz, M. & Stegun, I. A. 1964 Handbook of Mathematical Functions. Washington: Nat. Bur. Stand.
Batchelor, G. K. 1953 Homogeneous Turbulence. Cambridge University Press.
Batchelor, G. K. 1967 An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics. Cambridge University Press.
Batchelor, G. K. & Proudman, I. 1954 The effect of rapid distortion of a fluid in turbulent motion. Quart. J. Mech. Appl. Math. 7, 83.Google Scholar
Bearman, P. W. 1968. The flow around a circular cylinder in the critical Reynolds number regime. Nat. Phys. Lab. Aero. Rep. no. 1257.Google Scholar
Bearman, P. W. 1972 Some measurements of the distortion of turbulence approaching a two-dimensional body. J. Fluid Mech. 53, 451.Google Scholar
Cermak, J. E. & Horn, J. D. 1968 Tower shadow effect J. Geophys. Res. 73, 1869.Google Scholar
Darwin, C. G. 1953 Note on hydrodynamics. Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc. 49, 342.Google Scholar
Davenport, A. G. 1971 The response of six building shapes to turbulent wind. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A 269, 385.Google Scholar
Deissler, R. G. 1965 The problem of steady state shear flow turbulence. Phys. Fluids, 8, 391.Google Scholar
Deissler, R. G. 1967 Weak locally homogeneous turbulence and heat transfer with uniform normal strain. N.A.S.A. Tech. Note, D-3779.Google Scholar
Erdélyi, A., Magnus, W. & Oberhettinger, F. 1954 Tables of Integral Transforms, vol. 1. McGraw-Hill.
Gröbner, W. & Hofreiter, N. 1968 Integral Tafel, vol. 1. Springer.
Halitsky, J. 1968 Gas diffusion near buildings. In ‘Meteorology and Atomic Energy’. U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
Harris, I. 1971 The nature of the wind. Proc. Seminar at Inst. Civil Engrs, June 1970.Google Scholar
Hunt, J. C. R. 1971 The effect of single buildings and structures. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A 269, 457.Google Scholar
Hunt, J. C. R. 1973 A theory for fluctuating pressures on bluff bodies in turbulent flows. Proc. IUTAM/IAHR Symp. on Flow Induced Vibrations, Karlsruhe, 1972. Springer.
Hunt, J. C. R. & Mulhearn, P. J. 1973 The dispersion of pollution by the wind near twodimensional obstacles. J. Fluid Mech. 61, 245.Google Scholar
Kestin, J. 1966 The effect of free stream turbulence on heat transfer rates. Adv. in Heat Transfer, 3, 1.Google Scholar
Kestin, J. & Wood, R. T. 1970 On the stability of two-dimensional stagnation flow. J. Fluid Mech. 44, 461.Google Scholar
Lighthill, M. J. 1954 The response of laminar skin friction and heat transfer to fluctuations in the stream velocity. Proc. Roy. Soc. A 224, 1.Google Scholar
Lighthill, M. J. 1956 Drift. J. Fluid Mech. 1, 31.Google Scholar
Lighthill, M. J. 1970 Turbulence. In Osborne Reynolds and Engineering Science To-day, chap. 2. Manchester University Press.
Moffatt, H. K. 1965 The interaction of turbulence with strong wind shear. Proc. URSI—IUGG Int. Coll. on ‘Atmospheric Turbulence & Radio wave Propagation. Moscow: Nauka.
Owen, P. R. 1965 Buffeting excitation of boiler tube vibration. J. Mech. Engng Sci. 7, 431.Google Scholar
Pearson, J. R. A. 1959 The effect of uniform distortion on weak homogeneous turbulence. J. Fluid Mech. 5, 274.Google Scholar
Petty, D. G. 1974 The distortion of turbulence by a circular cylinder. To be published.
Piercy, N. A. V. & Richardson, E. G. 1930 The turbulence in front of a body moving through a viscous fluid. Phil. Mag. 9, 1038.Google Scholar
Prandtl, L. 1933 Attaining a steady air stream in wind tunnels. N.A.C.A. Tech. Memo. no. 726.Google Scholar
Ribner, H. S. & Tucker, M. 1953 Spectrum of turbulence in a contracting stream. N.A.C.A. Tech. Note, no. 19, p. 1113.Google Scholar
Sadeh, W. Z., Sutera, S. P. & Maeder, P. F. 1970a Analysis of vorticity amplification in the flow approaching a two-dimensional stagnation point. Z. angew. Math. Phys. 21, 699.Google Scholar
Sadeh, W. Z., Sutera, S. P. & Maeder, P. F. 1970b An investigation of vorticity amplification in stagnation flow. Z. angew. Math. Phys. 21, 717.Google Scholar
Sutera, S. P., Maeder, P. F. & Kestin, J. 1963 On the sensitivity of heat transfer in the stagnation point boundary layer to free stream vorticity. J. Fluid Mech. 16, 497.Google Scholar
Taylor, G. I. 1935 Turbulence in a contracting stream. Z. angew. Math. Mech. 15, 91.Google Scholar
Townsend, A. A. 1954 The uniform distortion of homogeneous turbulence. Quart. J. Mech. Appl. Math. 7, 118.Google Scholar
Townsend, A. A. 1970 Entrainment and the structure of turbulent flow. J. Fluid Mech. 41, 13.Google Scholar
Tucker, H. S. & Reynolds, A. J. 1968 The distortion of turbulence by irrotational plane strain. J. Fluid Mech. 32, 657.Google Scholar
Uberoi, M. S. 1956 The effect of wind tunnel contraction on free stream turbulence. J. Aero. Sci. 23, 754.Google Scholar
Von Kármán, T. 1948 Progress in the statistical theory of turbulence. J. Mar. Res. 7, 252.Google Scholar