Research Article
Direct numerical simulations of supercritical fluid mixing layers applied to heptane–nitrogen
- RICHARD S. MILLER, KENNETH G. HARSTAD, JOSETTE BELLAN
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 1-39
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Direct numerical simulations (DNS) are conducted of a model hydrocarbon–nitrogen mixing layer under supercritical conditions. The temporally developing mixing layer configuration is studied using heptane and nitrogen supercritical fluid streams at a pressure of 60 atm as a model system related to practical hydrocarbon-fuel/air systems. An entirely self-consistent cubic Peng–Robinson equation of state is used to describe all thermodynamic mixture variables, including the pressure, internal energy, enthalpy, heat capacity, and speed of sound along with additional terms associated with the generalized heat and mass transport vectors. The Peng–Robinson formulation is based on pure-species reference states accurate to better than 1% relative error through comparisons with highly accurate state equations over the range of variables used in this study (600 [les ] T [les ] 1100 K, 40 [les ] p [les ] 80 atm) and is augmented by an accurate curve fit to the internal energy so as not to require iterative solutions. The DNS results of two-dimensional and three-dimensional layers elucidate the unique thermodynamic and mixing features associated with supercritical conditions. Departures from the perfect gas and ideal mixture conditions are quantified by the compression factor and by the mass diffusion factor, both of which show reductions from the unity value. It is found that the qualitative aspects of the mixing layer may be different according to the specification of the thermal diffusion factors whose value is generally unknown, and the reason for this difference is identified by examining the second-order statistics: the constant Bearman–Kirkwood (BK) thermal diffusion factor excites fluctuations that the constant Irwing–Kirkwood (IK) one does not, and thus enhances overall mixing. Combined with the effect of the mass diffusion factor, constant positive large BK thermal diffusion factors retard diffusional mixing, whereas constant moderate IK factors tend to promote diffusional mixing. Constant positive BK thermal diffusion factors also tend to maintain density gradients, with resulting greater shear and vorticity. These conclusions about IK and BK thermal diffusion factors are species-pair dependent, and therefore are not necessarily universal. Increasing the temperature of the lower stream to approach that of the higher stream results in increased layer growth as measured by the momentum thickness. The three-dimensional mixing layer exhibits slow formation of turbulent small scales, and transition to turbulence does not occur even for a relatively long non-dimensional time when compared to a previous, atmospheric conditions study. The primary reason for this delay is the initial density stratification of the flow, while the formation of strong density gradient regions both in the braid and between-the-braid planes may constitute a secondary reason for the hindering of transition through damping of emerging turbulent eddies.
Aerodynamic lift and drag fluctuations of a sphere
- M. S. HOWE, G. C. LAUCHLE, J. WANG
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 41-57
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
An experimental and theoretical investigation is made of the unsteady lift and drag exerted on a sphere in a nominally steady, high Reynolds number, incompressible flow. The net force on the sphere has previously been ascribed to fluctuations in the bound vorticity in the meridian plane normal to the force, produced by large-scale coherent structures shed into the wake. A simplified model of vortex shedding is proposed that involves coherent eddies in the form of a succession of randomly orientated vortex rings, interconnected by pairs of oppositely rotating line vortices, and shed at quasi-regular intervals with a Strouhal number ∼ 0.19. The rings are rapidly dissipated by turbulence diffusion, but it is shown that only the nascent vortex ring makes a significant contribution to the surface force, and that the force spectrum at Strouhal numbers exceeding unity is effectively independent of the shape of the fully formed vortex. Predictions of the lift and drag spectra at these frequencies are found to be in good accord with new towing tank measurements presented in this paper.
The return to isotropy of homogeneous turbulence
- KWING-SO CHOI, JOHN L. LUMLEY
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 59-84
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Three types of homogeneous anisotropic turbulence were produced by the plane distortion, axisymmetric expansion and axisymmetric contraction of grid-generated turbulence, and their behaviour in returning to isotropy was experimentally studied using hot-wire anemometry. It was found that the turbulence trajectory after the plane distortion was highly nonlinear, and did not follow Rotta's linear model in returning to isotropy. The turbulence wanted to become axisymmetric even more than it wanted to return to isotropy. In order to show the rate of return to isotropy of homogeneous turbulence, a map of the ratio of the characteristic time scale for the decay of turbulent kinetic energy to that of the return to isotropy was constructed. This demonstrated that the rate of return to isotropy was much lower for turbulence with a greater third invariant of the anisotropy tensor. The invariant technique was then applied to the experimental results to develop a new turbulence model for the return-to-isotropy term in the Reynolds stress equation which satisfied the realizability conditions. The effect of the Reynolds number on the rate of return to isotropy was also investigated and the results incorporated in the proposed model.
Morphological instability in a directionally solidifying binary solution with an imposed shear flow
- C. A. CHUNG, FALIN CHEN
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 85-106
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The effect of an imposed shear flow on the stability of directionally solidifying binary alloys is investigated. It is shown that without the imposed shear flow the system is dominated by stationary boundary-layer-mode convection, a convection of salt-finger type confined to the solute boundary layer above the melt/mush interface. When the shear flow (no matter how small) is imposed, the boundary-layer mode becomes a longitudinal mode (roll-axis parallel to the imposed flow) propagating in the direction perpendicular to the shear flow, while the modes containing a transverse component are inhibited. As the shear flow becomes large enough, a transverse mode (roll-axis perpendicular to the imposed flow) of very unstable characteristics is induced. This mode, called the morphological mode, can exist even without buoyancy. It is triggered by the flow induced in the mushy layer through the Bernoulli force, a pressure variation resulting from the imposed flow passing along the corrugated melt/mush interface. It, nonetheless, has no relation to the boundary layer instability of the shear flow. The effect of imposed shear flow is so significant that the stability characteristics can be entirely different when the intensity of the imposed flow is larger than a critical value, which is calculated in the present paper.
On the beta-drift of an initially circular vortex patch
- J. SAI-LAP LAM, DAVID G. DRITSCHEL
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 107-129
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The nonlinear inviscid evolution of a vortex patch in a single-layer quasi-geostrophic fluid and within a background planetary vorticity gradient is examined numerically at unprecedented spatial resolution. The evolution is governed by two dimensionless parameters: the initial size (radius) of the vortex compared to the Rossby deformation radius, and the initial strength of the vortex compared to the variation of the planetary vorticity across the vortex. It is found that the zonal speed of a vortex increases with its strength. However, the meridional speed reaches a maximum at intermediate vortex strengths. Both large and weak vortices are readily deformed, often into elliptical and tripolar shapes. This deformation is shown to be related to an instability of the instantaneous vorticity distribution in the absence of the planetary vorticity gradient β.
The extremely high numerical resolution employed reveals a striking feature of the flow evolution, namely the generation of very sharp vorticity gradients surrounding the vortex and extending downstream of it in time. These gradients form as the vortex forces background planetary vorticity contours out of its way as it propagates. The contours close to the vortex swirl rapidly around the vortex and homogenize, but at some critical distance the swirl is not strong enough and, instead, a sharp vorticity gradient forms. The region inside this sharp gradient is called the ‘trapped zone’, though it shrinks slowly in time and leaks. This leaking occurs in a narrow wake called the ‘trailing front’, another zone of sharp vorticity gradients, extending behind the vortex.
Liquid-metal flow in a finite-length cylinder with a high-frequency rotating magnetic field
- L. MARTIN WITKOWSKI, P. MARTY, J. S. WALKER
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 131-143
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
A liquid-metal flow driven by a rotating magnetic field in a finite-length cylinder is studied numerically as a function of the field frequency. In the high-frequency case, the magnetic field is expelled from the liquid-metal except in a skin-depth layer along the side and top walls of the cylinder. In the corner region, where the skin-depth layers intersect, the body force exhibits a large positive and negative azimuthal component as well as inward radial and axial components which are rotational. The flows for various frequencies are compared to the low-frequency flow.
Steady three-dimensional water-wave patterns on a finite-depth fluid
- T. J. BRIDGES, F. DIAS, D. MENASCE
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 145-175
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The formation of doubly-periodic patterns on the surface of a fluid layer with a uniform velocity field and constant depth is considered. The fluid is assumed to be inviscid and the flow irrotational. The problem of steady patterns is shown to have a novel variational formulation, which includes a new characterization of steady uniform mean flow, and steady uniform flow coupled with steady doubly periodic patterns. A central observation is that mean flow can be characterized geometrically by associating it with symmetries. The theory gives precise information about the role of the ten natural parameters in the problem which govern the wave–mean flow interaction for steady patterns in finite depth. The formulation is applied to the problem of interaction of capillary–gravity short-crested waves with oblique travelling waves, leading to several new observations for this class of waves. Moreover, by including oblique travelling waves and short-crested waves in the same analysis, new bifurcations of short-crested waves are found, which give rise to mixed waves which may have complicated spatial structure.
Deformation of a two-dimensional drop at non-zero Reynolds number in time-periodic extensional flows: numerical simulation
- KAUSIK SARKAR, WILLIAM R. SCHOWALTER
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 177-206
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The shape of a two-dimensional viscous drop deforming in several time-dependent flow fields, including that due to a potential vortex, has been studied. Vortex flow was approximated by linearizing the induced velocity field at the drop centre, giving rise to an extensional flow with rotating axes of stretching. A generalization of the potential vortex, a flow we have called rotating extensional flow, occurs when the frequency of revolution of the flow is varied independently of the shear rate. Drops subjected to this forcing flow exhibit an interesting resonance phenomenon. Finally we have studied drop deformation in an oscillatory extensional flow.
Calculations were performed at small but non-zero Reynolds numbers using an ADI front-tracking/finite difference method. We investigate the effects of interfacial tension, periodicity, viscosity ratio, and Reynolds number on the drop dynamics. The simulation reveals interesting behaviour for steady stretching flows, as well as time-dependent flows. For a steady extensional flow, the drop deformation is found to be non-monotonic with time in its approach to an equilibrium value. At sufficiently high Reynolds numbers, the drop experiences multiple growth–collapse cycles, with possible axes reversal, before reaching a final shape. For a vortex flow, the long-time deformation reaches a steady value, and the drop attains a revolving steady elliptic shape. For rotating extensional flows as well as oscillatory extensional flows, the maximum value of deformation displays resonance with variation in parameters, first increasing and then decreasing with increasing interfacial tension or forcing frequency. A simple ODE model with proper forcing is offered to explain the observed phenomena.
Deformation of a two-dimensional viscous drop in time-periodic extensional flows: analytical treatment
- KAUSIK SARKAR, WILLIAM R. SCHOWALTER
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 207-230
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
In Sarkar & Schowalter (2001), we reported results from numerical simulations of drop deformation in various classes of time-periodic straining flows at non-zero Reynolds number. As often occurs, analytical solutions provide more effective understanding of the structure and significance of a phenomenon. Here we describe drop deformation predicted from analytical solutions to linear time-periodic straining flows. Three different limiting cases are considered: an unsteady Stokes flow that retains all but the nonlinear advection terms, a Stokes flow that neglects inertia altogether, and an inviscid potential flow. The first limit is in clear contrast to the common approach in emulsion literature that resorts almost always to the Stokes flow assumption. The analysis clearly shows the forced–damped mass–spring system underlying the physical phenomena, which distinguishes it from the inertialess Stokes flow. The potential flow also depicts resonance, albeit of an undamped system, and provides an important limit of the problem. The drop deformation is assumed to be small, and a perturbative approach has been employed. The first-order problem has been solved to arrive at either an evolution equation (in Stokes and potential flow limits) or the long-time periodic drop response (for unsteady Stokes analysis). The analytical results compare satisfactorily with those obtained from the numerical simulation in Sarkar & Schowalter (2001), and the resonance characteristics are quantitatively explained. The three different solutions are compared with each other, and the results are presented for different parameters such as frequency, interfacial tension, viscosity ratio, density ratio and Reynolds number. Furthermore, the simple ODE model presented in the Appendix of Sarkar & Schowalter (2001) is shown to explain the asymptotic limits of the present solution.
Longitudinal and transverse structure functions in a turbulent round jet: effect of initial conditions and Reynolds number
- G. P. ROMANO, R. A. ANTONIA
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 231-248
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The difference between scaling exponents of longitudinal and transverse velocity structure functions in the far-field of a round jet is found to depend on the anisotropy of the flow. The effect of the large-scale anisotropy is assessed by considering different initial conditions at the jet nozzle, and hence different ratios of the longitudinal to transverse rms velocities. The effect of the Taylor microscale Reynolds number on the small scale anisotropy is also considered. Both effects account, to a large extent, for the observed difference between longitudinal and transverse exponents and the disagreement between previously published results of different authors. This disagreement also depends on the method used to determine the inertial range. An empirical description of the overall behaviour of the structure functions provides reasonable estimates for the longitudinal and transverse exponents, accounting reasonably well for the anisotropy of both large- and small-scale motions.
Hydrodynamics of locomotion in the squid Loligo pealei
- ERIK J. ANDERSON, WILLIE QUINN, M. EDWIN DE MONT
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 249-266
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Potential flow analysis, including unsteady effects, has been applied to live swimming squid, Loligo pealei. Squid were modelled as slender, axisymmetric bodies. High-speed video records, recorded at frame rates of 125 to 250 Hz, provided time-varying body outlines which were digitized automatically. Axisymmetric renderings of these body outlines and the real motion of the squid were used as the input of the potential flow analysis. Axial and lateral inviscid fluid forces simply due to the flow past the squid body were calculated from pressures coefficients obtained from the unsteady Bernoulli equation. Lateral forces were found to play virtually no role in determining muscle stresses in squid jet propulsion. Axial pressure forces were also found to be small in comparison to both net force (based on the observed whole body kinematics) and estimations of skin friction. These findings demonstrate the effects of the highly adapted shape of squid with regard to hydrodynamics. The work suggests that skin friction and working fluid intake are the most significant sources of drag on a swimming squid.
Three-dimensional free convection in molten gallium
- A. JUEL, T. MULLIN, H. BEN HADID, D. HENRY
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 267-281
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Convective flow of molten gallium is studied in a small-aspect-ratio rectangular, differentially heated enclosure. The three-dimensional nature of the steady flow is clearly demonstrated by quantitative comparison between experimental temperature measurements, which give an indication of the strength of the convective flow, and the results of numerical simulations. The three-dimensional flow structure is characterized by cross-flows which are an order of magnitude smaller than the main circulation, and spread from the endwall regions to the entire enclosure when the Grashof number is increased beyond Gr = 104. The mergence of these effects in the centre of the enclosure leads to a complex central divergent flow structure which underpins the observed transition to oscillatory convection.
The dynamics of a laminar flow in a symmetric channel with a sudden expansion
- T. HAWA, Z. RUSAK
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 283-320
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Bifurcation analysis, linear stability study, and direct numerical simulations of the dynamics of a two-dimensional, incompressible, and laminar flow in a symmetric long channel with a sudden expansion with right angles and with an expansion ratio D/d (d is the width of the channel inlet section and D is the width of the outlet section) are presented. The bifurcation analysis of the steady flow equations concentrates on the flow states around a critical Reynolds number Rec(D/d) where asymmetric states appear in addition to the basic symmetric states when Re [ges ] Rec(D/d). The bifurcation of asymmetric states at Rec has a pitchfork nature and the asymmetric perturbation grows like √Re − Rec(D/d). The stability analysis is based on the linearized equations of motion for the evolution of infinitesimal two-dimensional disturbances imposed on the steady symmetric as well as asymmetric states. A neutrally stable asymmetric mode of disturbance exists at Rec(D/d) for both the symmetric and the asymmetric equilibrium states. Using asymptotic methods, it is demonstrated that when Re < Rec(D/d) the symmetric states have an asymptotically stable mode of disturbance. However, when Re > Rec(D/d), the symmetric states are unstable to this mode of asymmetric disturbance. It is also shown that when Re > Rec(D/d) the asymmetric states have an asymptotically stable mode of disturbance. The direct numerical simulations are guided by the theoretical approach. In order to improve the numerical simulations, a matching with the asymptotic solution of Moffatt (1964) in the regions around the expansion corners is also included. The dynamics of both small- and large-amplitude disturbances in the flow is described and the transition from symmetric to asymmetric states is demonstrated. The simulations clarify the relationship between the linear stability results and the time-asymptotic behaviour of the flow. The current analyses provide a theoretical foundation for previous experimental and numerical results and shed more light on the transition from symmetric to asymmetric states of a viscous flow in an expanding channel. It is an evolution from a symmetric state, which loses its stability when the Reynolds number of the incoming flow is above Rec(D/d), to a stable asymmetric equilibrium state. The loss of stability is a result of the interaction between the effects of viscous dissipation, the downstream convection of perturbations by the base symmetric flow, and the upstream convection induced by two-dimensional asymmetric disturbances.
Linear stability of a gas boundary layer flowing past a thin liquid film over a flat plate
- NIKOLAOS A. PELEKASIS, JOHN A. TSAMOPOULOS
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 321-352
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The flow of a gas stream past a flat plate under the influence of rainfall is investigated. As raindrops sediment on the flat plate, they coalesce to form a water film that flows under the action of shear from the surrounding gas stream. In the limit of (a) large Reynolds number, Re, in the gas phase, (b) small rainfall rate, r˙, compared to the free-stream velocity, U∞, and (c) small film thickness compared to the thickness of the boundary layer that surrounds it, a similarity solution is obtained that predicts growth of the liquid film like x3/4; x denotes dimensionless distance from the leading edge. The flow in the gas stream closely resembles the Blasius solution, whereas viscous dissipation dominates inside the film. Local linear stability analysis is performed, assuming nearly parallel base flow in the two streams, and operating in the triple-deck regime. Two distinct families of eigenvalues are identified, one corresponding to the well-known Tollmien–Schlichting (TS) waves that originate in the gas stream, and the other corresponding to an interfacial instability. It is shown that, for the air–water system, the TS waves are convectively unstable whereas the interfacial waves exhibit a pocket of absolute instability, at the streamwise location of the applied disturbance. Moreover, it is found that as the inverse Weber number (We−1) increases, indicating the increasing effect of surface tension compared to inertia, the pocket of absolute instability is translated towards larger distances from the leading edge and the growth rate of unstable waves decreases, until a critical value is reached, We−1 ≈ We−1c, beyond which the family of interfacial waves becomes convectively unstable. Increasing the inverse Froude number (Fr−1), indicating the increasing effect of gravity compared to inertia, results in the pocket of absolute instability shrinking until a critical value is reached, Fr−1 ≈ Fr−1c, beyond which the family of interfacial waves becomes convectively unstable. As We−1 and Fr−1 are further increased, interfacial waves are eventually stabilized, as expected. In this context, increasing the rainfall rate or the free-stream velocity results in extending the region of absolute instability over most of the airfoil surface. Owing to this behaviour it is conjectured that a global mode that interacts with the boundary layer may arise at the interface and, eventually, lead to three-dimensional waves (rivulets), or, under extreme conditions, even premature separation.
Developments in turbulence research: a review based on the 1999 Programme of the Isaac Newton Institute, Cambridge
- J. C. R. HUNT, N. D. SANDHAM, J. C. VASSILICOS, B. E. LAUNDER, P. A. MONKEWITZ, G. F. HEWITT
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 353-391
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Recent research is making progress in framing more precisely the basic dynamical and statistical questions about turbulence and in answering them. It is helping both to define the likely limits to current methods for modelling industrial and environmental turbulent flows, and to suggest new approaches to overcome these limitations. Our selective review is based on the themes and new results that emerged from more than 300 presentations during the Programme held in 1999 at the Isaac Newton Institute, Cambridge, UK, and on research reported elsewhere. A general conclusion is that, although turbulence is not a universal state of nature, there are certain statistical measures and kinematic features of the small-scale flow field that occur in most turbulent flows, while the large-scale eddy motions have qualitative similarities within particular types of turbulence defined by the mean flow, initial or boundary conditions, and in some cases, the range of Reynolds numbers involved. The forced transition to turbulence of laminar flows caused by strong external disturbances was shown to be highly dependent on their amplitude, location, and the type of flow. Global and elliptical instabilities explain much of the three-dimensional and sudden nature of the transition phenomena. A review of experimental results shows how the structure of turbulence, especially in shear flows, continues to change as the Reynolds number of the turbulence increases well above about 104 in ways that current numerical simulations cannot reproduce. Studies of the dynamics of small eddy structures and their mutual interactions indicate that there is a set of characteristic mechanisms in which vortices develop (vortex stretching, roll-up of instability sheets, formation of vortex tubes) and another set in which they break up (through instabilities and self- destructive interactions). Numerical simulations and theoretical arguments suggest that these often occur sequentially in randomly occurring cycles. The factors that determine the overall spectrum of turbulence were reviewed. For a narrow distribution of eddy scales, the form of the spectrum can be defined by characteristic forms of individual eddies. However, if the distribution covers a wide range of scales (as in elongated eddies in the ‘wall’ layer of turbulent boundary layers), they collectively determine the spectra (as assumed in classical theory). Mathematical analyses of the Navier–Stokes and Euler equations applied to eddy structures lead to certain limits being defined regarding the tendencies of the vorticity field to become infinitely large locally. Approximate solutions for eigen modes and Fourier components reveal striking features of the temporal, near-wall structure such as bursting, and of the very elongated, spatial spectra of sheared inhomogeneous turbulence; but other kinds of eddy concepts are needed in less structured parts of the turbulence. Renormalized perturbation methods can now calculate consistently, and in good agreement with experiment, the evolution of second- and third-order spectra of homogeneous and isotropic turbulence. The fact that these calculations do not explicitly include high-order moments and extreme events, suggests that they may play a minor role in the basic dynamics. New methods of approximate numerical simulations of the larger scales of turbulence or ‘very large eddy simulation’ (VLES) based on using statistical models for the smaller scales (as is common in meteorological modelling) enable some turbulent flows with a non-local and non-equilibrium structure, such as impinging or convective flows, to be calculated more efficiently than by using large eddy simulation (LES), and more accurately than by using ‘engineering’ models for statistics at a single point. Generally it is shown that where the turbulence in a fluid volume is changing rapidly and is very inhomogeneous there are flows where even the most complex ‘engineering’ Reynolds stress transport models are only satisfactory with some special adaptation; this may entail the use of transport equations for the third moments or non-universal modelling methods designed explicitly for particular types of flow. LES methods may also need flow-specific corrections for accurate modelling of different types of very high Reynolds number turbulent flow including those near rigid surfaces.
This paper is dedicated to the memory of George Batchelor who was the inspiration of so much research in turbulence and who died on 30th March 2000. These results were presented at the last fluid mechanics seminar in DAMTP Cambridge that he attended in November 1999.
Two-point closures and their applications: report on a workshop
- F. S. GODEFERD, C. CAMBON, J. F. SCOTT
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 393-407
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
This international scientific workshop was organized in Lyon, France, from 10 to 12 May 2000. Its focus was ‘Two-point closures and their applications’, with the understanding that the analysis and design of such models requires expert knowledge coming from a wide range of areas in turbulence research, e.g. experiments, numerical simulations, asymptotic models, etc.
In the global challenge of turbulence modelling, two-point closures prove useful in many ways. Two-point correlations and spectra are useful measures of the distortion of the eddy structure of turbulence by stratification, large-scale strains, rotation, etc. In some cases, e.g. near boundaries, spectra can be drastically changed. In addition to the accurate characterization of turbulence, the explicit computation of two-point correlations or spectra shows how the internal dynamics of the various scales of motion are affected by such distortion, especially the cascade process on which the production/dissipation relationship depends. Distortion can be the cause of large departures from isotropic homogeneous turbulence, pulling turbulent flows far away from the local equilibrium that is often assumed. A rather weak departure can allow the use of linearized theories such as rapid distortion theory, for the applicability of which rational bounds may be estimated by comparisons with weakly nonlinear calculations. A different approach is necessary when dealing with larger departures, for instance due to growth of instabilities. In that case new physical or similarity arguments have to be employed to obtain a satisfactory description of the modification to the cascade process, which can even undergo reversal in the limit when three-dimensional turbulence becomes two-dimensional. Of course, significant changes in spectra have direct implications for one-point measures of turbulence – which can be explicitly derived by integration of two-point correlations – used in most industrial closure schemes. Such one-point models consequently need to be adapted when turbulence is strongly affected by distortion.
Addendum
Schedule of International Conferences on Fluid Mechanics
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 June 2001, pp. 410-411
-
- Article
- Export citation