JFM Papers
Evolution and stationarity of liquid toroidal drop in compressional Stokes flow
- B. K. Ee, O. M. Lavrenteva, I. Smagin, A. Nir
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 1-23
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Dynamics of fluid tori in slow viscous flow is studied. Such tori are of interest as future carriers of biological and medicinal substances and are also viewed as potential building blocks towards more complex particles. In this study the immiscible ambient fluid is subject to a compressional flow (i.e., bi-extensional flow), and it comprises a generalization of our earlier report on the particular case with viscosity ratio $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}=1$ (see Zabarankin et al., J. Fluid Mech., vol. 785, 2015, pp. 372–400), where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}$ is the ratio between the torus viscosity and that of the ambient fluid. It is found that, for all viscosity ratios, the torus either collapses towards the axis of symmetry or expands indefinitely, depending on the initial conditions and the capillary number, Ca. During these dynamic patterns the cross-sections exhibit various forms of deformation. The collapse and expansion dynamic modes are separated by a limited deformation into a deformed stationary state which appears to exist in a finite interval of the capillary number, $0<Ca<Ca_{cr}(\unicode[STIX]{x1D706})$, and is unstable to axisymmetric disturbances, which eventually cause the torus either to collapse or to expand indefinitely. The characteristic dimensions and shapes of these unstable stationary tori and their dependence on the physical parameters Ca and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}$ are reported.
Non-isolated drop impact on surfaces
- Y. Wang, L. Bourouiba
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 24-44
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Upon impact on a solid surface, a drop expands into a sheet, a corona, which can rebound, stick or splash and fragment into secondary droplets. Previously, focus has been placed on impacts of single drops on surfaces to understand their splash, rebound or spreading. This is important for spraying, printing, and environmental and health processes such as contamination by pathogen-bearing droplets. However, sessile drops are ubiquitous on most surfaces and their interaction with the impacting drop is largely unknown. We report on the regimes of interactions between an impacting drop and a sessile drop. Combining experiments and theory, we derive the existence conditions for the four regimes of drop–drop interaction identified, and report that a subtle combination of geometry and momentum transfer determines a critical impact force governing their physics. Crescent-moon fragmentation is most efficient at producing and projecting secondary droplets, even when the impacting drop Weber number would not allow for splash to occur on the surface considered if the drop were isolated. We introduce a critical horizontal impact Weber number $We_{c}$ that governs the formation of a sheet from the sessile drop upon collision with the expanding corona of the impacting drop. We also predict and validate important properties of the crescent-moon fragmentation: the extension of its sheet base and the ligaments surrounding its base. Finally, our results suggest a new paradigm: impacts on most surfaces can make a splash of a new kind – a crescent-moon – for any impact velocity when neighbouring sessile drops are present.
Turbulent flows over superhydrophobic surfaces: flow-induced capillary waves, and robustness of air–water interfaces
- Jongmin Seo, Ricardo García-Mayoral, Ali Mani
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 45-85
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Superhydrophobic surfaces can retain gas pockets within their microscale textures when submerged in water. This property reduces direct contact between water and solid surfaces and presents opportunities for improving hydrodynamic performance by decreasing viscous drag. In most realistic applications, however, the flow regime is turbulent and retaining the gas pockets is a challenge. In order to overcome this challenge, it is crucial to develop an understanding of physical mechanisms that can lead to the failure of superhydrophobic surfaces in retaining gas pockets when the overlying liquid flow is turbulent. We present a study of the onset of failure in gas retention by analysing direct numerical simulations (DNS) of turbulent flows over superhydrophobic surfaces coupled with the deformation of air–water interfaces that hold the gas pockets. The superhydrophobic surfaces are modelled as periodic textures with patterned slip and no-slip boundary conditions on the overlying water flow. The liquid–gas interface is modelled via a linearized Young–Laplace equation, which is solved coupled with the overlying turbulent flow. A wide range of texture sizes and interfacial Weber numbers are considered in this study. Our analysis identifies flow-induced upstream-travelling capillary waves that are coherent in the spanwise direction as one mechanism for failure in retention of gas pockets. To confirm physical understanding of these waves, a semianalytical inviscid linear analysis is developed; the wave speeds obtained from the space–time correlations in the DNS data were found to match with the predictions of the semianalytical model. The magnitude of the pressure fluctuations due to these waves was found to increase with decreasing surface tension, and increase with a much stronger dependence on the slip velocity, when all numbers are reported in wall units. Based on a fitted scaling, a threshold criterion for the failure of superhydrophobic surfaces is developed that is based on estimates of the onset condition required for the motion of contact lines. The second contribution of this work is the development of boundary maps that identify stable and unstable zones in a parameter space consisting of working parameter and design parameters including texture size and material contact angle. We provide a brief description of previously identified failure modes of superhydrophobic surfaces, namely the stagnation pressure and shear-driven drainage mechanisms. In an overlay map, the stable and unstable zones due to each mechanism are presented. For various input conditions, we provide scaling laws that identify the most critical mechanism limiting the stability of gas retention by superhydrophobic surfaces.
The three-dimensional structure of swirl-switching in bent pipe flow
- Lorenz Hufnagel, Jacopo Canton, Ramis Örlü, Oana Marin, Elia Merzari, Philipp Schlatter
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 86-101
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Swirl-switching is a low-frequency oscillatory phenomenon which affects the Dean vortices in bent pipes and may cause fatigue in piping systems. Despite thirty years worth of research, the mechanism that causes these oscillations and the frequencies that characterise them remain unclear. Here we show that a three-dimensional wave-like structure is responsible for the low-frequency switching of the dominant Dean vortex. The present study, performed via direct numerical simulation, focuses on the turbulent flow through a $90^{\circ }$ pipe bend preceded and followed by straight pipe segments. A pipe with curvature 0.3 (defined as ratio between pipe radius and bend radius) is studied for a bulk Reynolds number $Re=11\,700$, corresponding to a friction Reynolds number $Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}\approx 360$. Synthetic turbulence is generated at the inflow section and used instead of the classical recycling method in order to avoid the interference between recycling and swirl-switching frequencies. The flow field is analysed by three-dimensional proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) which for the first time allows the identification of the source of swirl-switching: a wave-like structure that originates in the pipe bend. Contrary to some previous studies, the flow in the upstream pipe does not show any direct influence on the swirl-switching modes. Our analysis further shows that a three-dimensional characterisation of the modes is crucial to understand the mechanism, and that reconstructions based on two-dimensional POD modes are incomplete.
Premixed turbulent flame speed in an oscillating disturbance field
- Luke J. Humphrey, Benjamin Emerson, Tim C. Lieuwen
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 102-130
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
This paper considers the manner in which turbulent premixed flames respond to a superposition of turbulent and narrowband disturbances. This is an important fundamental problem that arises in most combustion applications, as turbulent flames exist in hydrodynamically unstable flow fields and/or in confined systems with narrowband acoustic waves. This paper presents the first measurements of the sensitivity of the turbulent displacement speed to harmonically oscillating flame wrinkles. The flame is attached to a transversely oscillating, heated wire, resulting in the introduction of coherent, convecting wrinkles on the flame. The approach flow turbulence is varied systematically using a variable turbulence generator, enabling quantification of the effect of turbulent flow disturbances on the harmonic wrinkles. Mie scattering measurements are used to quantify the flame edge dynamics, while high speed particle image velocimetry is used to measure the flow field characteristics. By ensemble averaging the results, the ensemble-averaged flame edge and flow characteristics are recovered. For low turbulence intensities, sharp cusps are present in the negative curvature regions of the ensemble-averaged flame position, similar to laminar flames. These cusps are smoothed out at high turbulence intensities. The coherent, ensemble-averaged flame wrinkle amplitude decays with increasing turbulence intensity and with downstream distance. In addition, the ensemble-averaged turbulent flame speed is modulated in space and time. The most significant result of these measurements is the clear demonstration of the correlation between the ensemble-averaged turbulent flame speed and ensemble-averaged flame curvature, with the phase-dependent flame speed increasing in regions of negative curvature. These results have important implications on turbulent combustion physics and modelling, since quasi-coherent velocity disturbances are nearly ubiquitous in shear driven, high turbulent flows and/or confined systems with acoustic feedback. Specifically, these data clearly show that nonlinear interactions occur between the multi-scale turbulent disturbances and the more narrowband disturbances associated with coherent structures. In other words, conceptual models of the controlling physics in combustors with shear driven turbulence must account for the fundamentally different effects of spectrally distributed turbulent disturbances and more narrowband, quasi-coherent disturbances.
The set-down and set-up of directionally spread and crossing surface gravity wave groups
- M. L. McAllister, T. A. A. Adcock, P. H. Taylor, T. S. van den Bremer
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 131-169
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Open access
- HTML
- Export citation
-
For sufficiently directionally spread surface gravity wave groups, the set-down of the wave-averaged free surface, first described by Longuet-Higgins and Stewart (J. Fluid Mech. vol. 13, 1962, pp. 481–504), can turn into a set-up. Using a multiple-scale expansion for two crossing wave groups, we examine the structure and magnitude of this wave-averaged set-up, which is part of a crossing wave pattern that behaves as a modulated partial standing wave: in space, it consists of a rapidly varying standing-wave pattern slowly modulated by the product of the envelopes of the two groups; in time, it grows and decays on the slow time scale associated with the translation of the groups. Whether this crossing wave pattern actually enhances the surface elevation at the point of focus depends on the phases of the linear wave groups, unlike the set-down, which is always negative and inherits the spatial structure of the underlying envelope(s). We present detailed laboratory measurements of the wave-averaged free surface, examining both single wave groups, varying the degree of spreading from small to very large, and the interaction between two wave groups, varying both the degree of spreading and the crossing angle between the groups. In both cases, we find good agreement between the experiments, our simple expressions for the set-down and set-up, and existing second-order theory based on the component-by-component interaction of individual waves with different frequencies and directions. We predict and observe a set-up for wave groups with a Gaussian angular amplitude distribution with standard deviations of above $30{-}40^{\circ }$ ($21{-}28^{\circ }$ for energy spectra), which is relatively large for realistic sea states, and for crossing sea states with angles of separation of $50{-}70^{\circ }$ and above, which are known to occur in the ocean.
Effect of temperature gradient on the cross-stream migration of a surfactant-laden droplet in Poiseuille flow
- Sayan Das, Shubhadeep Mandal, Suman Chakraborty
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 170-216
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The motion of a viscous droplet in unbounded Poiseuille flow under the combined influence of bulk-insoluble surfactant and linearly varying temperature field aligned in the direction of imposed flow is studied analytically. Neglecting fluid inertia, thermal convection and shape deformation, asymptotic analysis is performed to obtain the velocity of a force-free surfactant-laden droplet. The droplet speed and direction of motion are strongly influenced by the interfacial transport of surfactant, which is governed by surface Péclet number. The present study is focused on the following two limiting situations of surfactant transport: (i) surface-diffusion-dominated surfactant transport considering small surface Péclet number, and (ii) surface-convection-dominated surfactant transport considering high surface Péclet number. Thermocapillary-induced Marangoni stress, the strength of which relative to viscous stress is represented by the thermal Marangoni number, has a strong influence on the distribution of surfactant on the droplet surface. The present study shows that the motion of a surfactant-laden droplet in the combined presence of temperature and imposed Poiseuille flow cannot be obtained by a simple superposition of the following two independent results: migration of a surfactant-free droplet in a temperature gradient, and the motion of a surfactant-laden droplet in a Poiseuille flow. The temperature field not only affects the axial velocity of the droplet, but also has a non-trivial effect on the cross-stream velocity of the droplet in spite of the fact that the temperature gradient is aligned with the Poiseuille flow direction. When the imposed temperature increases in the direction of the Poiseuille flow, the droplet migrates towards the flow centreline. The magnitude of both axial and cross-stream velocity components increases with the thermal Marangoni number. However, when the imposed temperature decreases in the direction of the Poiseuille flow, the magnitude of both axial and cross-stream velocity components may increase or decrease with the thermal Marangoni number. Most interestingly, the droplet moves either towards the flow centreline or away from it. The present study shows a critical value of the thermal Marangoni number beyond which the droplet moves away from the flow centreline which is in sharp contrast to the motion of a surfactant-laden droplet in isothermal flow, for which the droplet always moves towards the flow centreline. Interestingly, we show that the above picture may become significantly altered in the case where the droplet is not a neutrally buoyant one. When the droplet is less dense than the suspending medium, the presence of gravity in the direction of the Poiseuille flow can lead to cross-stream motion of the droplet away from the flow centreline even when the temperature increases in the direction of the Poiseuille flow. These results may bear far-reaching consequences in various emulsification techniques in microfluidic devices, as well as in biomolecule synthesis, vesicle dynamics, single-cell analysis and nanoparticle synthesis.
Turbulent boundary layers absent mean shear
- Blair A. Johnson, Edwin A. Cowen
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 217-251
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We perform an experimental study to investigate the turbulent boundary layer above a stationary solid glass bed in the absence of mean shear. High Reynolds number $(Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}}\sim 300)$ horizontally homogeneous isotropic turbulence is generated via randomly actuated synthetic jet arrays (RASJA – Variano & Cowen J. Fluid Mech. vol. 604, 2008, pp. 1–32). Each of the arrays is controlled by a spatio-temporally varying algorithm, which in turn minimizes the formation of secondary mean flows. One array consists of an $8\times 8$ grid of jets, while the other is a $16\times 16$ array. Particle image velocimetry measurements are used to study the isotropic turbulent region and the boundary layer formed beneath as the turbulence encounters a stationary wall. The flow is characterized with statistical metrics including the mean flow and turbulent velocities, turbulent kinetic energy, integral scales and the turbulent kinetic energy transport equation, which includes the energy dissipation rate, production and turbulent transport. The empirical constant in the Tennekes (J. Fluid Mech. vol. 67, 1975, pp. 561–567) model of Eulerian frequency spectra is calculated based on the dissipation results and temporal frequency spectra from acoustic Doppler velocimetry measurements. We compare our results to prior literature that addresses mean shear free turbulent boundary layer characterizations via grid-stirred tank experiments, moving-bed experiments, rapid-distortion theory and direct numerical simulations in a forced turbulent box. By varying the operational parameters of the randomly actuated synthetic jet array, we also find that we are able to control the turbulence levels, including integral length scales and dissipation rates, by changing the mean on-times in the jet algorithm.
Trajectory of a model bacterium
- Akanksha Thawani, Mahesh S. Tirumkudulu
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 252-270
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
It is well known that bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, propel themselves in aqueous media by rotating helically shaped flagella. While a number of theoretical approaches have been proposed to model the detailed swimming motion, a rigorous comparison with experimental data is lacking due to the difficulty in simultaneously visualizing the motion of the head and the flagella along with the resulting trajectory. To this end, we have built a macroscopic working model of a bacterium and visualized its detailed motion in high-viscosity liquid. We show that a small asymmetry in the mass distribution in the head can lead to helical trajectories with large pitch and radius, which are reminiscent of the wiggling trajectories observed for swimming bacteria. The detailed motion agrees well with the predictions from slender-body theory that accounts for the asymmetric mass distribution in the head. Our study shows that the trajectory consists of two helical trajectories of different length scales – a large one caused by the asymmetric mass distribution and set by the head rotation rate, and a smaller one caused by the rotating flagellum and set by its rotation rate. We discuss implications of these results on the wiggling trajectories of swimming bacteria.
Characteristics of the turbulent energy dissipation rate in a cylinder wake
- J. G. Chen, Y. Zhou, R. A. Antonia, T. M. Zhou
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 271-300
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
This work aims to improve our understanding of the turbulent energy dissipation rate in the wake of a circular cylinder. Ten of the twelve velocity derivative terms which make up the energy dissipation rate are simultaneously obtained with a probe composed of four X-wires. Measurements are made in the plane of mean shear at $x/d=10$, 20 and 40, where $x$ is the streamwise distance from the cylinder axis and $d$ is the cylinder diameter, at a Reynolds number of $2.5\times 10^{3}$ based on $d$ and free-stream velocity. Both statistical and topological features of the velocity derivatives as well as the energy dissipation rate, approximated by a surrogate based on the assumption of homogeneity in the transverse plane, are examined. The spectra of the velocity derivatives indicate that local axisymmetry is first satisfied at higher wavenumbers while the departure at lower wavenumbers is caused by the Kármán vortex street. The spectral method proposed by Djenidi & Antonia (Exp. Fluids, vol. 53, 2012, pp. 1005–1013) based on the universality of the dissipation range of the longitudinal velocity spectrum normalized by the Kolmogorov scales also applies in the present flow despite the strong perturbation from the Kármán vortex street and violation of local isotropy at small $x/d$. The appropriateness of the spectral chart method is consistent with Antonia et al.’s (Phys. Fluids, vol. 26, 2014, 45105) observation that the two major assumptions in Kolmogorov’s first similarity hypothesis, i.e. very large Taylor microscale Reynolds number and local isotropy, can be significantly relaxed. The data also indicate that vorticity spectra are more sensitive, when testing the first similarity hypothesis, than velocity spectra. They also reveal that the velocity derivatives $\unicode[STIX]{x2202}u/\unicode[STIX]{x2202}y$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x2202}v/\unicode[STIX]{x2202}x$ play an important role in the interaction between large and small scales in the present flow. The phase-averaged data indicate that the energy dissipation is concentrated mostly within the coherent spanwise vortex rollers, in contrast with the model of Hussain (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 173, 1986, pp. 303–356) and Hussain & Hayakawa (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 180, 1987, p. 193), who conjectured that it resides mainly in regions of strong turbulent mixing.
Determination of the bottom deformation from space- and time-resolved water wave measurements
- Pablo J. Cobelli, Philippe Petitjeans, Agnès Maurel, Vincent Pagneux
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 301-326
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
In this paper we study both theoretically and experimentally the inverse problem of indirectly measuring the shape of a localized bottom deformation with a non-instantaneous time evolution, from either an instantaneous global state (space-based inversion) or a local time-history record (time-based inversion) of the free-surface evolution. Firstly, the mathematical inversion problem is explicitly defined and uniqueness of its solution is established. We then show that this problem is ill-posed in the sense of Hadamard, rendering its solution unstable. In order to overcome this difficulty, we introduce a regularization scheme as well as a strategy for choosing the optimal value of the associated regularization parameter. We then conduct a series of laboratory experiments in which an axisymmetric three-dimensional bottom deformation of controlled shape and time evolution is imposed on a layer of water of constant depth, initially at rest. The detailed evolution of the air–liquid interface is measured by means of a free-surface profilometry technique providing space- and time-resolved data. Based on these experimental data and employing our regularization scheme, we are able to show that it is indeed possible to reconstruct the seabed profile responsible for the linear free-surface dynamics either by space- or time-based inversions. Furthermore, we discuss the different relative advantages of each type of reconstruction, their associated errors and the limitations of the inverse determination.
Large-eddy simulation of flow over a grooved cylinder up to transcritical Reynolds numbers
- W. Cheng, D. I. Pullin, R. Samtaney
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 327-362
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We report wall-resolved large-eddy simulation (LES) of flow over a grooved cylinder up to the transcritical regime. The stretched-vortex subgrid-scale model is embedded in a general fourth-order finite-difference code discretization on a curvilinear mesh. In the present study $32$ grooves are equally distributed around the circumference of the cylinder, each of sinusoidal shape with height $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}$, invariant in the spanwise direction. Based on the two parameters, $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}/D$ and the Reynolds number $Re_{D}=U_{\infty }D/\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}$ where $U_{\infty }$ is the free-stream velocity, $D$ the diameter of the cylinder and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}$ the kinematic viscosity, two main sets of simulations are described. The first set varies $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}/D$ from $0$ to $1/32$ while fixing $Re_{D}=3.9\times 10^{3}$. We study the flow deviation from the smooth-cylinder case, with emphasis on several important statistics such as the length of the mean-flow recirculation bubble $L_{B}$, the pressure coefficient $C_{p}$, the skin-friction coefficient $C_{f\unicode[STIX]{x1D703}}$ and the non-dimensional pressure gradient parameter $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$. It is found that, with increasing $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}/D$ at fixed $Re_{D}$, some properties of the mean flow behave somewhat similarly to changes in the smooth-cylinder flow when $Re_{D}$ is increased. This includes shrinking $L_{B}$ and nearly constant minimum pressure coefficient. In contrast, while the non-dimensional pressure gradient parameter $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$ remains nearly constant for the front part of the smooth cylinder flow, $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$ shows an oscillatory variation for the grooved-cylinder case. The second main set of LES varies $Re_{D}$ from $3.9\times 10^{3}$ to $6\times 10^{4}$ with fixed $\unicode[STIX]{x1D716}/D=1/32$. It is found that this $Re_{D}$ range spans the subcritical and supercritical regimes and reaches the beginning of the transcritical flow regime. Mean-flow properties are diagnosed and compared with available experimental data including $C_{p}$ and the drag coefficient $C_{D}$. The timewise variation of the lift and drag coefficients are also studied to elucidate the transition among three regimes. Instantaneous images of the surface, skin-friction vector field and also of the three-dimensional Q-criterion field are utilized to further understand the dynamics of the near-surface flow structures and vortex shedding. Comparison of the grooved-cylinder flow with the equivalent flow over a smooth-wall cylinder shows structural similarities but significant differences. Both flows exhibit a clear common signature, which is the formation of mean-flow secondary separation bubbles that transform to other local flow features upstream of the main separation region (prior separation bubbles) as $Re_{D}$ is increased through the respective drag crises. Based on these similarities it is hypothesized that the drag crises known to occur for flow past a cylinder with different surface topographies is the result of a change in the global flow state generated by an interaction of primary flow separation with secondary flow recirculating motions that manifest as a mean-flow secondary bubble. For the smooth-wall flow this is accompanied by local boundary-layer flow transition to turbulence and a strong drag crisis, while for the grooved-cylinder case the flow remains laminar but unsteady through its drag crisis and into the early transcritical flow range.
Pore-scale modelling of Ostwald ripening
- Jacques A. de Chalendar, Charlotte Garing, Sally M. Benson
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 363-392
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- HTML
- Export citation
-
In a saturated solution with dispersed clusters of a second phase, the mechanism by which the larger clusters grow at the expense of the smaller ones is called Ostwald ripening. Although the mechanism is well understood in situations where multiple clusters of gas exist in a liquid solution, evolution is much more complicated to predict when the two phases interact with a solid matrix, since the solid plays a significant role in determining the shape of the interface. In this paper, we study capillary dominated regimes in porous media where the driving force is inter-cluster diffusion. By decomposing the Ostwald ripening mechanism into two processes that operate on different time scales – the diffusion of solute gas in the liquid and the readjustment of the shape of the gas–liquid interface to accommodate a change in mass – we develop a sequential algorithm to solve for the evolution of systems with multiple gas ganglia. In the absence of a solid matrix, thermodynamic equilibrium is reached when all of the gas phase aggregates to form one large bubble. In porous media on the other hand, we find that ripening can lead to equilibrium situations with multiple disconnected ganglia, and that evolution is highly dependent on initial conditions and the structure of the solid matrix. The fundamental difference between the two cases is in the relationship between mass and capillary pressure.
Dynamics and structure of an apolar active suspension in an annulus
- Sheng Chen, Peng Gao, Tong Gao
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 393-405
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We study the complex dynamics of a two-dimensional suspension comprising non-motile active particles confined in an annulus. A coarse-grained liquid crystal model is employed to describe the nematic structure evolution, and is hydrodynamically coupled with the Stokes equation to solve for the induced active flows in the annulus. For dilute suspensions, coherent structures are captured by varying the particle activity and gap width, including unidirectional circulations, travelling waves and chaotic flows. For concentrated suspensions, the internal collective dynamics features motile disclination defects and flows at finite gap widths. In particular, we observe an intriguing quasi-steady-state at certain gap widths during which $+1/2$-order defects oscillate around equilibrium positions accompanying travelling-wave flows that switch circulating directions periodically. We perform linear stability analyses to reveal the underlying physical mechanisms of pattern formation during a concatenation of instabilities.
Scaling law for the lift force of autorotating falling seeds at terminal velocity
- Injae Lee, Haecheon Choi
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 406-420
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We provide a scaling law for the lift force of autorotating falling seeds at terminal velocity to describe the relation among the lift force, seed geometry and terminal descending and rotating velocities. Two theories, steady wing-vortex theory and actuator-disk theory, are examined to derive the scaling law. In the steady wing-vortex theory, the strength of a leading-edge vortex is scaled with the circulation around a wing and the lift force is modelled by the time derivative of vortical impulse, whereas the conservations of mass, linear and angular momentum, and kinetic energy across the autorotating falling seed are applied in the actuator-disk theory. To examine the validity of the theoretical results, an unsteady three-dimensional numerical simulation is conducted for flow around an autorotating seed (Acer palmatum) during free fall. The sectional lift coefficient predicted from the steady wing-vortex theory reasonably agrees with that from the numerical simulation, whereas the actuator-disk theory fails to provide an estimation of the sectional lift coefficient. The weights of 11 different species of autorotating falling seeds fall on the scaling law derived from the steady wing-vortex theory, suggesting that even a simple theoretical approach can explain how falling seeds support their weights by autorotation once the circulation from a leading-edge vortex is properly included in the theory.
DNS of a turbulent Couette flow at constant wall transpiration up to $Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}=1000$
- S. Kraheberger, S. Hoyas, M. Oberlack
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 421-443
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We present a new set of direct numerical simulation data of a turbulent plane Couette flow with constant wall-normal transpiration velocity $V_{0}$, i.e. permeable boundary conditions, such that there is blowing on the lower side and suction on the upper side. Hence, there is no net change in flux to preserve periodic boundary conditions in the streamwise direction. Simulations were performed at $Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}=250,500,1000$ with varying transpiration rates in the range $V_{0}^{+}\approx 0.03$ to 0.085. Additionally, a classical Couette flow case at $Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}=1000$ is presented for comparison. As a first key result we found a considerably extended logarithmic region of the mean velocity profile, with constant indicator function $\unicode[STIX]{x1D705}=0.77$ as transpiration increases. Further, turbulent intensities are observed to decrease with increasing transpiration rate. Mean velocities and intensities collapse only in the cases where the transpiration rate is kept constant, while they are largely insensitive to friction Reynolds number variations. The long and wide characteristic stationary rolls of classical turbulent Couette flow are still present for all present DNS runs. The rolls are affected by wall transpiration, but they are not destroyed even for the largest transpiration velocity case. Spectral information indicates the prevalence of the rolls and the existence of wide structures near the blowing wall. The statistics of all simulations can be downloaded from the webpage of the Chair of Fluid Dynamics.
Oscillations of confined fibres transported in microchannels
- M. Nagel, P.-T. Brun, H. Berthet, A. Lindner, F. Gallaire, C. Duprat
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 444-470
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We investigate the trajectories of rigid fibres as they are transported in a pressure-driven flow, at low Reynolds number, in shallow Hele-Shaw cells. The transverse confinement and the resulting viscous friction on these elongated objects, as well as the lateral confinement (i.e. the presence of lateral walls), lead to complex fibre trajectories that we characterize with a combination of microfluidic experiments and simulations using modified Brinkman equations. We show that the transported fibre behaves as an oscillator for which we obtain and analyse a complete state diagram.
Temporal acceleration of a turbulent channel flow
- A. Mathur, S. Gorji, S. He, M. Seddighi, A. E. Vardy, T. O’Donoghue, D. Pokrajac
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 471-490
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Open access
- HTML
- Export citation
-
We report new laboratory experiments of a flow accelerating from an initially turbulent state following the opening of a valve, together with large eddy simulations of the experiments and extended Stokes first problem solutions for the early stages of the flow. The results show that the transient flow closely resembles an accelerating laminar flow superimposed on the original steady turbulent flow. The primary consequence of the acceleration is the temporal growth of a boundary layer from the wall, gradually leading to a strong instability causing transition. This extends the findings of previous direct numerical simulations of transient flow following a near-step increase in flow rate. In this interpretation, the initial turbulence is not the primary characteristic of the resulting transient flow, but can be regarded as noise, the evolution of which is strongly influenced by the development of the boundary layer. We observe the spontaneous appearance of turbulent spots and discontinuities in the velocity signals in time and space, revealing rich detail of the transition process, including a striking contrast between streamwise and wall-normal fluctuating velocities.
Mixed insulating and conducting thermal boundary conditions in Rayleigh–Bénard convection
- Dennis Bakhuis, Rodolfo Ostilla-Mónico, Erwin P. van der Poel, Roberto Verzicco, Detlef Lohse
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 491-511
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Open access
- HTML
- Export citation
-
A series of direct numerical simulations of Rayleigh–Bénard convection, the flow in a fluid layer heated from below and cooled from above, were conducted to investigate the effect of mixed insulating and conducting boundary conditions on convective flows. Rayleigh numbers between $Ra=10^{7}$ and $Ra=10^{9}$ were considered, for Prandtl numbers $\mathit{Pr}=1$ and $\mathit{Pr}=10$. The bottom plate was divided into patterns of conducting and insulating stripes. The size ratio between these stripes was fixed to unity and the total number of stripes was varied. Global quantities, such as the heat transport and average bulk temperature, and local quantities, such as the temperature just below the insulating boundary wall, were investigated. For the case with the top boundary divided into two halves, one conducting and one insulating, the heat transfer was found to be approximately two-thirds of that for the fully conducting case. Increasing the pattern frequency increased the heat transfer, which asymptotically approached the fully conducting case, even if only half of the surface is conducting. Fourier analysis of the temperature field revealed that the imprinted pattern of the plates is diffused in the thermal boundary layers, and cannot be detected in the bulk. With conducting–insulating patterns on both plates, the trends previously described were similar; however, the half-and-half division led to a heat transfer of about a half of that for the fully conducting case instead of two-thirds. The effect of the ratio of conducting and insulating areas was also analysed, and it was found that, even for systems with a top plate with only 25 % conducting surface, heat transport of 60 % of the fully conducting case can be seen. Changing the one-dimensional stripe pattern to a two-dimensional chequerboard tessellation does not result in a significantly different response of the system.
Water entry of a wedge with rolled-up vortex sheet
- Yuriy A. Semenov, G. X. Wu
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 November 2017, pp. 512-539
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The problem of asymmetric water entry of a wedge with the vortex sheet shed from its apex is considered within the framework of the ideal and incompressible fluid. The effects due to gravity and surface tension are ignored and the flow therefore can be treated as self-similar, as there is no length scale. The solution for the problem is sought through two mutually dependent parts using two different analytic approaches. The first one is due to water entry, which is obtained through the integral hodograph method for the complex velocity potential, in which the streamline on the body surface remains on the body surface after passing the apex, leading to a non-physical local singularity. The second one is due to a vortex sheet shed from the apex, and the shape of the sheet and the strength distribution of the vortex are obtained through the solution of the Birkhoff–Rott equation. The total circulation of the vortex sheet is obtained by imposing the Kutta condition at the apex, which removes the local singularity. These two solutions are nonlinearly coupled on the unknown free surface and the unknown vortex sheet. This poses a major challenge, which distinguishes the present formulation of the problem from the previous ones on water entry without a vortex sheet and ones on vortex shedding from a wedge apex without a moving free surface. Detailed results in terms of pressure distribution, vortex sheet, velocity and force coefficients are presented for wedges of different inner angles and heel angles, as well as the water-entry direction. It is shown that the vortex shedding from the tip of the wedge has a profound local effect, but only weakly affects the free-surface shape, overall pressure distribution and force coefficients.