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Near-surface turbulence in a grid-stirred tank

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2006

Blair H. Brumley
Affiliation:
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA
Gerhard H. Jirka
Affiliation:
DeFrees Hydraulics Laboratory, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

Abstract

In order to elucidate the turbulent structure below a shear-free gas-liquid interface, turbulence measurements were made in a 50 cm square by 40 cm deep tank stirred by a vertically oscillating grid well below the surface, using a split-film anemometer probe rotating in a horizontal circle. This instrument is able to measure both vertical and horizontal velocity fluctuations to within 0.4 mm of the surface, from which spatial spectra and profiles of r.m.s. velocity fluctuations and integral lengthscales can be calculated. The turbulent structure is affected by the presence of the surface within a ‘surface-influenced layer’ roughly one integral scale, or ten per cent of the distance from the surface to the centre of the grid stroke, in thickness. The shapes of the spectra and profiles within the surface-influenced layer are predicted to a good first approximation by the source theory of Hunt & Graham (1978), which treats the turbulent structure as the superposition of homogeneous turbulence with an irrotational velocity field driven by a source distribution at the surface which cancels the vertical velocity fluctuations there. The magnitudes (as opposed to the shapes) of the profiles scale according to the values that would otherwise occur in the vicinity of the surface-influenced layer were the surface not present. These magnitudes are adequately predicted by the bulk relations determined by Hopfinger & Toly (1976) and Thompson & Turner (1975), with no apparent dependence on turbulent Reynolds number. There are some minor discrepancies between the measured profiles and those of Hunt & Graham. A thin layer of reduced velocity fluctuations below what would be expected from the theory was observed near the surface. Also, anisotropy in the velocity spectra at depths within the surface-influenced layer extended well into the inertial subrange, whereas the Hunt & Graham theory predicts no anisotropy at high wavenumbers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1987 Cambridge University Press

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