Focus on Fluids
Toward coherently representing turbulent wall-flow dynamics
- J. C. Klewicki
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 October 2013, pp. 1-4
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Export citation
-
The complex dynamics of turbulent flow in the vicinity of a solid surface underlie numerous scientifically important processes, and pose persistently daunting challenges in many engineering applications. Since their discovery decades ago, coherent motions have presented a tantalizing prospective opportunity for constructing descriptions of wall-flow dynamics using only a relatively small number of elements. The veracity and reliability of such representations are, however, ultimately tied to their basis in the Navier–Stokes equations. In this regard, the study by Sharma & McKeon (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 728, 2013, pp. 196–238) constitutes an important contribution, as it not only provides insights regarding the mechanisms underlying wall-flow coherent motion formation and evolution, but does so within a Navier–Stokes framework.
Papers
A unified criterion for the centrifugal instabilities of vortices and swirling jets
- Paul Billant, François Gallaire
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 October 2013, pp. 5-35
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Swirling jets and vortices can both be unstable to the centrifugal instability but with a different wavenumber selection: the most unstable perturbations for swirling jets in inviscid fluids have an infinite azimuthal wavenumber, whereas, for vortices, they are axisymmetric but with an infinite axial wavenumber. Accordingly, sufficient condition for instability in inviscid fluids have been derived asymptotically in the limits of large azimuthal wavenumber $m$ for swirling jets (Leibovich and Stewartson, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 126, 1983, pp. 335–356) and large dimensionless axial wavenumber $k$ for vortices (Billant and Gallaire, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 542, 2005, pp. 365–379). In this paper, we derive a unified criterion valid whatever the magnitude of the axial flow by performing an asymptotic analysis for large total wavenumber $ \sqrt{{k}^{2} + {m}^{2} } $. The new criterion recovers the criterion of Billant and Gallaire when the axial flow is small and the Leibovich and Stewartson criterion when the axial flow is finite and its profile sufficiently different from the angular velocity profile. When the latter condition is not satisfied, it is shown that the accuracy of the Leibovich and Stewartson asymptotics is strongly reduced. The unified criterion is validated by comparisons with numerical stability analyses of various classes of swirling jet profiles. In the case of the Batchelor vortex, it provides accurate predictions over a wider range of axial wavenumbers than the Leibovich–Stewartson criterion. The criterion shows also that a whole range of azimuthal wavenumbers are destabilized as soon as a small axial velocity component is present in a centrifugally unstable vortex.
On the breakdown of Rayleigh’s criterion for curved shear flows: a destabilization mechanism for a class of inviscidly stable flows
- Philip Hall
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 07 October 2013, pp. 36-82
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The stability of a high-Reynolds-number flow over a curved surface is considered. Attention is focused on spanwise-periodic vortices of wavelength comparable with the boundary layer thickness. The wall curvature and the Görtler number for the flow are assumed large, so that stable or unstable vortices of wavelength comparable with the boundary layer thickness are dominated by inviscid effects. The growth or decay rate determined by using the viscous correction to the inviscid prediction is found to give a good approximation to the exact value for a range of wavenumbers. For the stable configuration, it is shown that the flow can be destabilized by arbitrarily small wall waviness, with the critical configuration involving only geometric properties of the flow. This destabilization mechanism has consequences for a number of flows of aerodynamic interest, particularly those where surface waviness under loading occurs. Control strategies based on how the curvature is distributed are discussed, and it is demonstrated how small regions of varying curvature can be used to remove the exponentially growing modes. The development of the parametric instabilities is continued into the strongly nonlinear regime. The nonlinear evolution is found to be governed by a generalized form of the cubic amplitude equation, generally referred to as the Stuart–Landau equation. The novel feature of the new equation is that the nonlinearity is not in the form of a power of the amplitude but is fixed by the solution of an associated nonlinear partial differential equation boundary value problem. Numerical solutions of the nonlinear partial differential system that fix the disturbance amplitude are given. The mechanism of destabilization described is shown to be directly relevant to a number of flows that are inviscidly stable in the presence of body forces. Thus it is shown how Rayleigh–Bénard convection or Taylor vortices can, at high Rayleigh or Taylor numbers, be destabilized by asymptotically small modulation in time or space.
Global analysis of Navier–Stokes and Boussinesq stochastic flows using dynamical orthogonality
- T. P. Sapsis, M. P. Ueckermann, P. F. J. Lermusiaux
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 07 October 2013, pp. 83-113
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We provide a new framework for the study of fluid flows presenting complex uncertain behaviour. Our approach is based on the stochastic reduction and analysis of the governing equations using the dynamically orthogonal field equations. By numerically solving these equations, we evolve in a fully coupled way the mean flow and the statistical and spatial characteristics of the stochastic fluctuations. This set of equations is formulated for the general case of stochastic boundary conditions and allows for the application of projection methods that considerably reduce the computational cost. We analyse the transformation of energy from stochastic modes to mean dynamics, and vice versa, by deriving exact expressions that quantify the interaction among different components of the flow. The developed framework is illustrated through specific flows in unstable regimes. In particular, we consider the flow behind a disk and the Rayleigh–Bénard convection, for which we construct bifurcation diagrams that describe the variation of the response as well as the energy transfers for different parameters associated with the considered flows. We reveal the low dimensionality of the underlying stochastic attractor.
Nonlinear interfacial dynamics in stratified multilayer channel flows
- E. S. Papaefthymiou, D. T. Papageorgiou, G. A. Pavliotis
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 October 2013, pp. 114-143
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The dynamics of viscous immiscible pressure-driven multilayer flows in channels are investigated using a combination of modelling, analysis and numerical computations. More specifically, the particular system of three stratified layers with two internal fluid–fluid interfaces is considered in detail in order to identify the nonlinear mechanisms involved due to multiple fluid surface interactions. The approach adopted is analytical/asymptotic and is valid for interfacial waves that are long compared with the channel height or individual undisturbed liquid layer thicknesses. This leads to a coupled system of fully nonlinear partial differential equations of Benney type that contain a small slenderness parameter that cannot be scaled out of the problem. This system is in turn used to develop a consistent coupled system of weakly nonlinear evolution equations, and it is shown that this is possible only if the underlying base-flow and fluid parameters satisfy certain conditions that enable a synchronous Galilean transformation to be performed at leading order. Two distinct canonical cases (all terms in the equations are of the same order) are identified in the absence and presence of inertia, respectively. The resulting systems incorporate all of the active physical mechanisms at Reynolds numbers that are not large, namely, nonlinearities, inertia-induced instabilities (at non-zero Reynolds number) and surface tension stabilization of sufficiently short waves. The coupled system supports several instabilities that are not found in single long-wave equations including, transitional instabilities due to a change of type of the flux nonlinearity from hyperbolic to elliptic, kinematic instabilities due to the presence of complex eigenvalues in the linearized advection matrix leading to a resonance between the interfaces, and the possibility of long-wave instabilities induced by an interaction between the flux function of the system and the surface tension terms. All of these instabilities are followed into the nonlinear regime by carrying out extensive numerical simulations using spectral methods on periodic domains. It is established that instabilities leading to coherent structures in the form of nonlinear travelling waves are possible even at zero Reynolds number, in contrast to single interface (two-layer) systems; in addition, even in parameter regimes where the flow is linearly stable, the coupling of the flux functions and their hyperbolic–elliptic transitions lead to coherent structures for initial disturbances above a threshold value. When inertia is present an additional short-wave instability enters and the systems become general coupled Kuramoto–Sivashinsky-type equations. Extensive numerical experiments indicate a rich landscape of dynamical behaviour including nonlinear travelling waves, time-periodic travelling states and chaotic dynamics. It is also established that it is possible to regularize the chaotic dynamics into travelling wave pulses by enhancing the inertialess instabilities through the advective terms. Such phenomena may be of importance in mixing, mass and heat-transfer applications.
On high-frequency noise scattering by aerofoils in flow
- Lorna J. Ayton, N. Peake
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 October 2013, pp. 144-182
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
A theoretical model is developed for the sound scattered when a sound wave is incident on a cambered aerofoil at non-zero angle of attack. The model is based on the linearization of the Euler equations about a steady subsonic flow, and is an adaptation of previous work which considered incident vortical disturbances. Only high-frequency sound waves are considered. The aerofoil thickness, camber and angle of attack are restricted such that the steady flow past the aerofoil is a small perturbation to a uniform flow. The singular perturbation analysis identifies asymptotic regions around the aerofoil; local ‘inner’ regions, which scale on the incident wavelength, at the leading and trailing edges of the aerofoil; Fresnel regions emanating from the leading and trailing edges of the aerofoil due to the coalescence of singularities and points of stationary phase; a wake transition region downstream of the aerofoil leading and trailing edge; and an outer region far from the aerofoil and wake. An acoustic boundary layer on the aerofoil surface and within the transition region accounts for the effects of curvature. The final result is a uniformly-valid solution for the far-field sound; the effects of angle of attack, camber and thickness are investigated.
Recoil of a liquid filament: escape from pinch-off through creation of a vortex ring
- Jérôme Hoepffner, Gounséti Paré
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 October 2013, pp. 183-197
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
A liquid filament recoils because of its surface tension. It may recoil to one sphere, the geometrical shape with lowest surface, or otherwise segment to several pieces which individually will recoil to spheres. This experiment is classical and its exploration is fundamental to the understanding of how liquid volumes relax. In this paper, we uncover a mechanism involving the creation of a vortex ring which plays a central role in escaping segmentation. The retracting blob is connected to the untouched filament by a neck. The radius of the neck decreases in time such that we may expect pinch-off. There is a flow through the neck because of the retraction. This flow may detach into a jet downstream of the neck when fluid viscosity exceeds a threshold. This sudden detachment creates a vortex ring which strongly modifies the flow pressure: fluid is expelled back into the neck which in turn reopens.
Vortex generation by deep-water breaking waves
- N. E. Pizzo, W. Kendall Melville
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 October 2013, pp. 198-218
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Open access
- Export citation
-
The connection between wave dissipation by breaking deep-water surface gravity waves and the resulting turbulence and mixing is crucial for an improved understanding of air–sea interaction processes. Starting with the ensemble-averaged Euler equations, governing the evolution of the mean flow, we model the forcing, associated with the breaking-induced Reynolds shear stresses, as a body force describing the bulk scale effects of a breaking deep-water surface gravity wave on the water column. From this, we derive an equation describing the generation of circulation, $\Gamma $, of the ensemble-average velocity field, due to the body force. By examining the relationship between a breaking wave and an impulsively forced fluid, we propose a functional form for the body force, allowing us to build upon the classical work on vortex ring phenomena to both quantify the circulation generated by a breaking wave and describe the vortex structure of the induced motion. Using scaling arguments, we show that $\Gamma = \alpha {(hk)}^{3/ 2} {c}^{3} / g$, where ($c, h, k$) represent a characteristic speed, height and wavenumber of the breaking wave, respectively, $g$ is the acceleration due to gravity and $\alpha $ is a constant. This then allows us to find a direct relationship between the circulation and the wave energy dissipation rate per unit crest length due to breaking, ${\epsilon }_{l} $. Finally, we compare our model and the available experimental data.
A macrotransport equation for the particle distribution in the flow of a concentrated, non-colloidal suspension through a circular tube
- Arun Ramachandran
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 October 2013, pp. 219-252
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
A two-time-scale perturbation expansion is used to derive a cross-section-averaged convection–dispersion equation for the particle distribution in the flow of a concentrated suspension of neutrally buoyant, non-colloidal particles through a straight, circular tube. Since the cross-streamline motion of particles is governed by shear-induced migration, the Taylor-dispersion coefficient ${\mathscr{D}}_{eff} $ scales as ${U}^{\prime } {R}^{3} / {a}^{2} $, ${U}^{\prime } $, $R$ and $a$ being the characteristic velocity scale, the tube radius and the particle radius, respectively. Here ${\mathscr{D}}_{eff} $ is found to decrease monotonically with an increase in the particle concentration. The linear dependence of ${\mathscr{D}}_{eff} $ on ${U}^{\prime } $ implies that changes in the cross-section averaged axial concentration profile are dependent only on the total axial strain experienced by the suspension. This stipulates that the spatial evolution of a fluctuation in the concentration of particles in the flowing suspension, or the width of the mixing zone between two regions of different concentrations in the tube will be independent of the suspension velocity in the tube. A second interesting feature in particulate dispersion is that the effective velocity of the particulate phase is concentration-dependent, which, by itself (i.e. without considering Taylor dispersion), can produce either sharpening or relaxation of concentration gradients. In particular, shocks with positive concentration gradients along the flow direction can asymptotically evolve into time-independent distributions in an appropriately chosen frame of reference, and concentration pulses relax asymmetrically. These trends are contrasted with those expected from the classical problem of Taylor dispersion of a passive tracer in the same geometry. The results in this paper are especially relevant for suspension flows through microfluidic geometries, where the induction lengths for shear-induced migration are short.
Turbulent acidic jets and plumes injected into an alkaline environment
- H. Ülpre, I. Eames, A. Greig
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 October 2013, pp. 253-274
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Open access
- Export citation
-
The characteristics of an acidic turbulent jet and plume injected into an alkaline environment are examined theoretically and experimentally. Fluid-flow and chemistry models are combined to understand how the concentration of acid in a parcel of fluid changes as it reacts with alkaline fluid entrained from the ambient. The resulting model is tested in an experimental study in which nitric acid jets or plumes are injected into a large tank containing a variety of alkaline substances. A video camera records a pH-sensitive dye in the jet or plume, which changes colour with variations in the pH. The results were time averaged and processed to measure distance from the source to the point of neutralization. The agreement between predictions and observations of neutralization distances is good, confirming that the model captures the salient physics of the problem. Using empirically determined titration curves, a combined fluid flow and chemistry model is applied to discuss the environmental implications of a warm acidic turbulent plume injected into an alkaline river or sea.
Model-based scaling of the streamwise energy density in high-Reynolds-number turbulent channels
- Rashad Moarref, Ati S. Sharma, Joel A. Tropp, Beverley J. McKeon
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 09 October 2013, pp. 275-316
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We study the Reynolds-number scaling and the geometric self-similarity of a gain-based, low-rank approximation to turbulent channel flows, determined by the resolvent formulation of McKeon & Sharma (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 658, 2010, pp. 336–382), in order to obtain a description of the streamwise turbulence intensity from direct consideration of the Navier–Stokes equations. Under this formulation, the velocity field is decomposed into propagating waves (with single streamwise and spanwise wavelengths and wave speed) whose wall-normal shapes are determined from the principal singular function of the corresponding resolvent operator. Using the accepted scalings of the mean velocity in wall-bounded turbulent flows, we establish that the resolvent operator admits three classes of wave parameters that induce universal behaviour with Reynolds number in the low-rank model, and which are consistent with scalings proposed throughout the wall turbulence literature. In addition, it is shown that a necessary condition for geometrically self-similar resolvent modes is the presence of a logarithmic turbulent mean velocity. Under the practical assumption that the mean velocity consists of a logarithmic region, we identify the scalings that constitute hierarchies of self-similar modes that are parameterized by the critical wall-normal location where the speed of the mode equals the local turbulent mean velocity. For the rank-1 model subject to broadband forcing, the integrated streamwise energy density takes a universal form which is consistent with the dominant near-wall turbulent motions. When the shape of the forcing is optimized to enforce matching with results from direct numerical simulations at low turbulent Reynolds numbers, further similarity appears. Representation of these weight functions using similarity laws enables prediction of the Reynolds number and wall-normal variations of the streamwise energy intensity at high Reynolds numbers (${Re}_{\tau } \approx 1{0}^{3} {\unicode{x2013}} 1{0}^{10} $). Results from this low-rank model of the Navier–Stokes equations compare favourably with experimental results in the literature.
Topographic controls on gravity currents in porous media
- Samuel S. Pegler, Herbert E. Huppert, Jerome A. Neufeld
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 09 October 2013, pp. 317-337
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We present a theoretical and experimental study of the propagation of gravity currents in porous media with variations in the topography over which they flow, motivated in part by the sequestration of carbon dioxide in saline aquifers. We consider cases where the height of the topography slopes upwards in the direction of the flow and is proportional to the $n\text{th} $ power of the horizontal distance from a line or point source of a constant volumetric flux. In two-dimensional cases with $n\gt 1/ 2$, the current evolves from a self-similar form at early times, when the effects of variations in topography are negligible, towards a late-time regime that has an approximately horizontal upper surface and whose evolution is dictated entirely by the geometry of the topography. For $n\lt 1/ 2$, the transition between these flow regimes is reversed. We compare our theoretical results in the case $n= 1$ with data from a series of laboratory experiments in which viscous glycerine is injected into an inclined Hele-Shaw cell, obtaining good agreement between the theoretical results and the experimental data. In the case of axisymmetric topography, all topographic exponents $n\gt 0$ result in a transition from an early-time similarity solution towards a topographically controlled regime that has an approximately horizontal free surface. We also analyse the evolution over topography that can vary with different curvatures and topographic exponents between the two horizontal dimensions, finding that the flow transitions towards a horizontally topped regime at a rate which depends strongly on the ratio of the curvatures along the principle axes. Finally, we apply our mathematical solutions to the geophysical setting at the Sleipner field, concluding that topographic influence is unlikely to explain the observed non-axisymmetric flow.
Rayleigh–Taylor instability in a finite cylinder: linear stability analysis and long-time fingering solutions
- H. Sweeney, R. R. Kerswell, T. Mullin
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 09 October 2013, pp. 338-362
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We consider the Rayleigh–Taylor instability problem of two initially stationary immiscible viscous fluids positioned with the denser above the less dense in a finite circular cylinder, such that their starting fluid–fluid interface is the horizontal midplane of the cylinder. The ensuing linear instability problem has a five-dimensional parameter space – defined by the density ratio, the viscosity ratio, the cylinder aspect ratio, the surface tension between the fluids and the ratio of viscous to gravitational time scales – of which we explore only part, motivated by recent experiments where viscous fluids exchange in vertical tubes (Beckett et al., J. Fluid Mech., 2011, vol. 682, pp. 652–670). We find that for these experiments, the instability is invariably ‘side-by-side’ (of azimuthal wavenumber 1 type) but we also uncover parameter regions where the preferred instability is axisymmetric. The fact that both ‘core-annular’ (axisymmetric) and ‘side-by-side’ (asymmetric) long-time flows are seen experimentally highlights the fact that the initial Rayleigh–Taylor instability of the interface does not determine the long-time flow configuration in these situations. Finally, long-time flow solutions are presented on the basis that they will be slowly varying fingering solutions.
Multifluid Eulerian model of an electrospray in a host gas
- F. J. Higuera
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 10 October 2013, pp. 363-386
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
An Eulerian multifluid model is used to describe the evolution of an electrospray plume and the flow induced in the surrounding gas by the drag of the electrically charged spray droplets in the space between an injection electrode containing the electrospray source and a collector electrode. The spray is driven by the voltage applied between the two electrodes. Numerical computations and order-of-magnitude estimates for a quiescent gas show that the droplets begin to fly back toward the injection electrode at a certain critical value of the flux of droplets in the spray, which depends very much on the electrical conditions at the injection electrode. As the flux is increased toward its critical value, the electric field induced by the charge of the droplets partially balances the field due to the applied voltage in the vicinity of the injection electrode, leading to a spray that rapidly broadens at a distance from its origin of the order of the stopping distance at which the droplets lose their initial momentum and the effect of their inertia becomes negligible. The axial component of the electric field first changes sign in this region, causing the fly back. The flow induced in the gas significantly changes this picture in the conditions of typical experiments. A gas plume is induced by the drag of the droplets whose entrainment makes the radius of the spray away from the injection electrode smaller than in a quiescent gas, and convects the droplets across the region of negative axial electric field that appears around the origin of the spray when the flux of droplets is increased. This suppresses fly back and allows much higher fluxes to be reached than are possible in a quiescent gas. The limit of large droplet-to-gas mass ratio is discussed. Migration of satellite droplets to the shroud of the spray is reproduced by the Eulerian model, but this process is also affected by the motion of the gas. The gas flow preferentially pushes satellite droplets from the shroud to the core of the spray when the effect of the inertia of the droplets becomes negligible, and thus opposes the well-established electrostatic/inertial mechanism of segregation and may end up concentrating satellite droplets in an intermediate radial region of the spray.
Dynamics of thermal ignition of spray flames in mixing layers
- D. Martínez-Ruiz, J. Urzay, A. L. Sánchez, A. Liñán, F. A. Williams
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 10 October 2013, pp. 387-423
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Conditions are identified under which analyses of laminar mixing layers can shed light on aspects of turbulent spray combustion. With this in mind, laminar spray-combustion models are formulated for both non-premixed and partially premixed systems. The laminar mixing layer separating a hot-air stream from a monodisperse spray carried by either an inert gas or air is investigated numerically and analytically in an effort to increase understanding of the ignition process leading to stabilization of high-speed spray combustion. The problem is formulated in an Eulerian framework, with the conservation equations written in the boundary-layer approximation and with a one-step Arrhenius model adopted for the chemistry description. The numerical integrations unveil two different types of ignition behaviour depending on the fuel availability in the reaction kernel, which in turn depends on the rates of droplet vaporization and fuel-vapour diffusion. When sufficient fuel is available near the hot boundary, as occurs when the thermochemical properties of heptane are employed for the fuel in the integrations, combustion is established through a precipitous temperature increase at a well-defined thermal-runaway location, a phenomenon that is amenable to a theoretical analysis based on activation-energy asymptotics, presented here, following earlier ideas developed in describing unsteady gaseous ignition in mixing layers. By way of contrast, when the amount of fuel vapour reaching the hot boundary is small, as is observed in the computations employing the thermochemical properties of methanol, the incipient chemical reaction gives rise to a slowly developing lean deflagration that consumes the available fuel as it propagates across the mixing layer towards the spray. The flame structure that develops downstream from the ignition point depends on the fuel considered and also on the spray carrier gas, with fuel sprays carried by air displaying either a lean deflagration bounding a region of distributed reaction or a distinct double-flame structure with a rich premixed flame on the spray side and a diffusion flame on the air side. Results are calculated for the distributions of mixture fraction and scalar dissipation rate across the mixing layer that reveal complexities that serve to identify differences between spray-flamelet and gaseous-flamelet problems.
Consequences of viscous anisotropy in a deforming, two-phase aggregate. Part 1. Governing equations and linearized analysis
- Yasuko Takei, Richard F. Katz
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 11 October 2013, pp. 424-455
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
In partially molten regions of Earth, rock and magma coexist as a two-phase aggregate in which the solid grains of rock form a viscously deformable framework or matrix. Liquid magma resides within the permeable network of pores between grains. Deviatoric stress causes the distribution of contact area between solid grains to become anisotropic; in turn, this causes anisotropy of the matrix viscosity at the continuum scale. In this two-paper set, we predict the consequences of viscous anisotropy for flow of two-phase aggregates in three configurations: simple shear, Poiseuille, and torsional flow. Part 1 presents the governing equations and an analysis of their linearized form. Part 2 (Katz & Takei, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 734, 2013, pp. 456–485) presents numerical solutions of the full, nonlinear model. In our theory, the anisotropic viscosity tensor couples shear and volumetric components of the matrix stress/strain rate. This coupling, acting over a gradient in shear stress, causes segregation of liquid and solid. Liquid typically migrates toward higher shear stress, but under specific conditions, the opposite can occur. Furthermore, it is known that in a two-phase aggregate with a porosity-weakening viscosity, matrix shear causes porosity perturbations to grow into a banded or sheeted structure. We show that viscous anisotropy reduces the angle between these emergent high-porosity features and the shear plane. Laboratory experiments produce similar, high-porosity features. We hypothesize that the low angle of porosity bands in such experiments is the result of viscous anisotropy. We therefore predict that experiments incorporating a gradient in shear stress will develop sample-wide liquid–solid segregation due to viscous anisotropy.
Consequences of viscous anisotropy in a deforming, two-phase aggregate. Part 2. Numerical solutions of the full equations
- Richard F. Katz, Yasuko Takei
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 11 October 2013, pp. 456-485
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
In partially molten regions of Earth, rock and magma coexist as a two-phase aggregate in which the solid grains of rock form a viscously deformable framework or matrix. Liquid magma resides within the permeable network of pores between grains. Deviatoric stress causes the distribution of contact area between solid grains to become anisotropic; this, in turn, causes anisotropy of the matrix viscosity at the continuum scale. In the second of a two-paper set, we use numerical methods to solve the full, nonlinear, time-dependent equations governing this system. We consider porosity evolution in simple shear, Poiseuille and torsional flow. Under viscous anisotropy, there are two modes of porosity evolution: base-state segregation, which modifies the domain-scale porosity distribution, and growth of porosity perturbations into melt-rich bands. Simulation results with fixed anisotropy confirm and extend the linearized analysis of Part 1 (Takei & Katz, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 734, 2013, pp. 424–455). Most importantly, numerical solutions capture the interaction of the two modes: under Poiseuille flow, base-state segregation enhances band formation; under torsional flow, bands are suppressed. Simulations also show that low band angle is maintained by nonlinear processes such as reconnection of high-porosity segments and by back-rotation of the compacted regions between bands. Simulations with dynamic anisotropy modify these results, further lowering the average band angle. The effective viscosity of each flow is controlled by base-state segregation; it does not evolve under simple shear, decreases in Poiseuille flow and increases in torsion. We propose a reinterpretation of experimental results in terms of the consequences of viscous anisotropy.
Bore-generated macrovortices on erodible beds
- M. Brocchini
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 11 October 2013, pp. 486-508
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The interaction of free-surface bores and an erodible porous channel bed in a shallow-water flow is analysed based on the assumption of weak coupling between free-surface discontinuities and bed discontinuities and on the simplest closure for the sediment transport rate (cubic with the mean flow velocity). It is shown that free-surface bores with finite cross-stream extent can evolve over the erodible bed by generating vertically oriented macrovortices in a manner similar to, but more complex than, that of free-surface bores of finite cross-stream extent over a rigid channel bottom. An equation for the potential vorticity is derived, which shows that on an erodible bed the vortices are generated by a combination of various mechanisms related to energy dissipation of both surface bores and bed discontinuities. The model is verified and the physics explored by comparison with a number of numerical simulations, typical of both riverine (dam-break test and pit test) and nearshore (bore on a beach test) flows, and with previously published experimental results. For all cases a fairly good agreement is found between the analytically estimated potential vorticity and that computed numerically.
Large-eddy simulation of three-dimensional dunes in a steady, unidirectional flow. Part 2. Flow structures
- Mohammad Omidyeganeh, Ugo Piomelli
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 October 2013, pp. 509-534
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We performed large-eddy simulations of the flow over a series of three-dimensional (3D) dunes at laboratory scale. The bedform three-dimensionality was imposed by shifting a standard two-dimensional (2D) dune shape in the streamwise direction according to a sine wave. The turbulence statistics were discussed in Part 1 of this article (Omidyeganeh & Piomelli, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 721, 2013, pp. 454–483). Coherent flow structures and their statistics are discussed concentrating on two cases with the same crestline amplitudes and wavelengths but different crestline alignments: in-phase and staggered. The present paper shows that the induced large-scale mean streamwise vortices are the primary factor that alters the features of the instantaneous flow structures. Wall turbulence is insensitive to the crestline alignment; alternating high- and low-speed streaks appear in the internal boundary layer developing on the stoss side, whereas over the node plane (the plane normal to the spanwise direction at the node of the crestline), they are inclined towards the lobe plane (the plane normal to the spanwise direction at the most downstream point of the crestline) due to the mean spanwise pressure gradient. Spanwise vortices (rollers) generated by Kelvin–Helmholtz instability in the separated shear layer appear regularly over the lobe with much larger length scale than those over the saddle (the plane normal to the spanwise direction at the most upstream point of the crestline). Rollers over the lobe may extend to the saddle plane and affect the reattachment features; their shedding is more frequent than in 2D geometries. Vortices shed from the separated shear layer in the lobe plane undergo a three-dimensional instability while being advected downstream, and rise toward the free surface. They develop into a horseshoe shape (similar to the 2D case) and affect the whole channel depth, whereas those generated near the saddle are advected downstream and toward the bed. When the tip of such a horseshoe reaches the free surface, the ejection of flow at the surface causes ‘boils’ (upwelling events on the surface). Strong boil events are observed on the surface of the lobe planes of 3D dunes more frequently than in the saddle planes. They also appear more frequently than in the corresponding 2D geometry. The crestline alignment of the dune alters the dynamics of the flow structures, in that they appear in the lobe plane and are advected towards the saddle plane of the next dune, where they are dissipated. Boil events occur at a higher frequency in the staggered alignment, but with less intensity than in the in-phase alignment.
Non-geostrophic instabilities of an equilibrium baroclinic state
- Alexandre B. Pieri, F. S. Godeferd, C. Cambon, A. Salhi
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 14 October 2013, pp. 535-566
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We consider non-geostrophic homogeneous baroclinic turbulence without solid boundaries, and we focus on its energetics and dynamics. The homogeneous turbulent flow is therefore submitted to both uniform vertical shear $S$ and stable vertical stratification, parametrized by the Brunt–Väisälä frequency $N$, and placed in a rotating frame with Coriolis frequency $f$. Direct numerical simulations show that the threshold of baroclinic instability growth depends mostly on two dimensionless numbers, the gradient Richardson number $\mathit{Ri}= {N}^{2} / {S}^{2} $ and the Rossby number $\mathit{Ro}= S/ f$, whereas linear theory predicts a threshold that depends only on $\mathit{Ri}$. At high Rossby numbers the nonlinear limit is found to be $\mathit{Ri}= 0. 2$, while in the limit of low $\mathit{Ro}$ the linear stability bound $\mathit{Ri}= 1$ is recovered. We also express the stability results in terms of background potential vorticity, which is an important quantity in baroclinic flows. We show that the linear symmetric instability occurs from the presence of negative background potential vorticity. The possibility of simultaneous existence of symmetric and baroclinic instabilities is also investigated. The dominance of symmetric instability over baroclinic instability for $\mathit{Ri}\ll 1$ is confirmed by our direct numerical simulations, and we provide an improved understanding of the dynamics of the flow by exploring the details of energy transfers for moderate Richardson numbers.