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The coupled dynamics of internal waves and hairpin vortices in stratified plane Poiseuille flow

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 January 2022

C.J. Lloyd*
Affiliation:
Energy and Environment Institute, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, UK
R.M. Dorrell
Affiliation:
Energy and Environment Institute, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, UK
C.P. Caulfield
Affiliation:
BP Institute for Multiphase Flow, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB3 0EZ, UK Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB3 0WA, UK
*
Email address for correspondence: c.j.lloyd@hull.ac.uk

Abstract

A simulation of stably stratified plane Poiseuille flow at a moderate Reynolds number ($\textit {Re}_\tau = 550$) and Richardson number ($\textit {Ri}_\tau = 480$) is presented. For the first time, the dynamics in the channel core are shown to be described as a series of internal waves that approximately obey a linear wave dispersion relationship. For a given streamwise wavenumber $k_x$ there are two internal wave solutions, a dominant low frequency mode and a weaker-amplitude high-frequency mode, respectively corresponding to ‘backward’ and ‘forward’ propagating internal waves relative to the mean flow. Analysis of linearised equations shows that the dominant low-frequency mode appears to arise due to a particularly sensitive response of the mean flow profiles to incoherent forcing. Instantaneous visualisations reveal that hairpin vortices dominate the outer region of the channel flow, neighbouring the buoyancy dominated channel core. These hairpins are fundamentally different from those observed in canonical unstratified boundary layer flows, as they arise via quasi-linear local processes far from the wall, governed by background shear. Outer region ejection events are common and can be induced by high amplitude waves. Ejected hairpins are transported into the channel core, in turn ‘ringing’ the prevailing strong buoyancy gradient and thus generating high-amplitude internal waves, high dissipation and wave breaking, induced by spanwise vortex stretching and baroclinic vorticity generation. Such spontaneous and sustained generation of quasi-linear internal waves by wall-bounded sheared turbulence may provide novel idealised solutions for, and insight into, large-scale turbulent mixing in a wide range of environmental and industrial flows.

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Type
JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press.
Figure 0

Table 1. Cases with time-averaged parameters and case-specific quantities. The bulk Reynolds and Richardson numbers are given by $\textit {Re}_b = U_b \delta /\nu$ and $\textit {Ri}_b = \Delta \rho g \delta /2 \rho _0 U_b^{2}$ where $U_b$ is the bulk velocity. $Nu = -2 \partial _y \bar {\rho }|_w$ is the Nusselt number and $\varLambda = 2 \textit {Re}_\tau \textit {Pr} / \varkappa \textit {Ri}_\tau Nu$ is the Obukhov length normalised by the channel half-height $\delta$ with the Kármán constant $\varkappa = 0.41$; $\varDelta ^{+}_i$ quantifies the element sizes in wall units (normalisation by $\delta _\nu =\nu /u_\tau$). Note that each element is further discretised by $8^{3}$ GLL points.

Figure 1

Figure 1. Numerical domain. Coloured regions represent the inner region at $y\leqslant 0.2$ and $y\geqslant 1.8$ (blue), the outer region at $0.2 < y \leqslant 0.8$ and $1.2 \leqslant y < 1.8$ (pink) and the channel core at $0.8 < y < 1.2$ (red). The dashed line represents the channel centreline at $y=1$.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Profiles of flow statistics, averaged in $x$, $z$ and $t$. Superscript $+$ represents wall-unit normalisation by $u_\tau$, $\delta _\nu = \nu /u_\tau$, and $\rho _\tau = -\Delta \rho \textit {Re}_\tau ^{-1} \textit {Pr}^{-1} \partial _y \bar {\rho }$. Solid lines are Case U data, dashed lines are Case S data. Areas shaded light and dark grey respectively highlight the inner ($y \leqslant 0.2$) and channel core ($y > 0.8$) regions, while the outer region ($0.2 < y \leqslant 0.8$) is unshaded. Areas shaded green represent regions where the phase speed of ‘linear’ internal waves is equal to the background planar and temporally averaged flow velocity: $c = \overline{U}_{mean} - N_{mean} / k_x = \overline{U}$. Here, $N$ is the buoyancy frequency, defined in (3.1ad), and the subscript ‘mean’ denotes averaging over the channel core ($y > 0.8$); $c$ is calculated for a streamwise wavenumber ($k_x$) range of 2.5 to 5.0. These $k_x$ bounds correspond to 50 % of the maximum $v'$ spectral energy at $y=1$ (as shown in figure 8).

Figure 3

Figure 3. Profiles of key dimensionless quantities for Case S, defined in (3.1ad). Shaded regions are as per figure 2.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Two-dimensional premultiplied spatial energy spectra for the (negative) momentum flux (a), vertical velocity (b), density (c) and buoyancy flux (d), at $y^{+} = 100$. Solid contour lines represent U data, shaded contours represent S data. Contour lines are 20 %, 40 %, 60 % and 80 % of respective maximum values.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Two-dimensional premultiplied spatial energy spectra for the (negative) momentum flux (a), vertical velocity (b), density (c) and buoyancy flux (d), at $y = 0.75$. Solid contour lines represent U data, shaded contours represent S data. Contour lines are 20 %, 40 %, 60 % and 80 % of respective maximum values.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Two-dimensional premultiplied spatial energy spectra for the vertical velocity (a) and density (b), at $y = 1$. Solid contour lines represent U data, shaded contours represent S data. Contour lines are 20 %, 40 %, 60 % and 80 % of respective maximum values.

Figure 7

Figure 7. Two-dimensional premultiplied energy spectra as a function of vertical and streamwise wavenumbers. Spectra are calculated in the window $y \in [0.2,0.8]$. Contour lines are 20 %, 40 %, 60 % and 80 % of respective minimum (cyan) and maximum (magenta) values. Dashed lines represent equal magnitudes of vertical and streamwise wavenumbers, $k_x = \pm k_y$ ($45^{\circ }$ wave vector angle). Note that spectra are truncated at $k_y=\pm 10$.

Figure 8

Figure 8. Two-dimensional energy spectra as a function of streamwise wavenumber $k_x$ and frequency $\omega$ at $y=1$ for Case U (a,b) and Case S, (c,d). Contours are log-scaled relative energy spectra magnitude. The lines represent different dispersion relations. Subscript max denotes maximum values, and subscript mean denotes the average value in the channel core region ($0.8 < y < 1.2$).

Figure 9

Figure 9. DMD modes for Case S on a $z$-normal slice at $z=L_z/2$. DMD modal amplitudes $E_{\varPhi,j} = ||\boldsymbol {\varPhi }_j||^{2}$ as a function of temporal frequency $\omega _j$ are plotted in (a) with black dots. Panel (b) presents the same data as (a) with axis limits focused on the internal waves. One-dimensional temporal vertical velocity energy spectra, $E_{vv}^{1D}$, calculated at $y=1$, are also plotted with a red line. The spatial structure of the highlighted mode in (a,b) ($\bullet$, blue) is shown in (cf), where $\varPhi _U$ is the streamwise velocity component, $\varPhi _V$ is the vertical velocity component and $\varPhi _\rho$ is the density component. Streamlines calculated from $\varPhi _U$ and $\varPhi _V$ are reported in (e). The observed structure of this example mode ($\bullet$, blue) is typical of all modes corresponding to local peaks in $E_{vv}^{1D}$, deviating only by the streamwise wavenumber.

Figure 10

Figure 10. DMD modes for Case S on a $y$-normal slice at $y=1$. DMD modal amplitudes $E_{\varPhi,j} = ||\boldsymbol {\varPhi }_j||^{2}$ as a function of temporal frequency $\omega _j$ are plotted in (a) with black dots. One-dimensional temporal vertical velocity energy spectra, $E_{vv}^{1D}$, calculated at $y=1$, are also plotted with a red solid line. The spatial structure of the two highlighted modes in (a) ($\blacksquare$, $\blacktriangleright$) are shown in (b,c), where $\varPhi_V$ is the density component. The observed structure of these two example modes is typical of all modes with local peaks in $E_\varPhi$. Energy spectra of $\varPhi_V$ as a function of streamwise wavenumber $k_x$ are presented in (d) for both Mode 1 ($\blacksquare$) and Mode 2 ($\blacktriangleright$). Note that both signals are bimodal, with a dominant high $k_x$ peak and a weaker low $k_x$ peak.

Figure 11

Figure 11. Dispersion relation for Case S, obtained from DMD modes at $y=1$. Data are $\varPhi _v$ modes (a) and $\varPhi _\rho$ modes (b). Figures are coloured by spectral energy, normalised by the maximum spectral energy.

Figure 12

Figure 12. Snapshots of solutions to the white-noise-forced linearised equations. Variables are the streamwise velocity (a), vertical velocity (b) and buoyancy (c), perturbations, and the white-noise function (d).

Figure 13

Figure 13. Two-dimensional energy spectra as a function of streamwise wavenumber $k_x$ and frequency $\omega$ at $y=1$, for the white-noise-forced system. Contours are log-scaled relative energy spectrum magnitude. The lines represents different dispersion relations. Subscript max denotes maximum values, and subscript mean denotes the average value in the channel core region ($0.8 < y < 1.2$).

Figure 14

Figure 14. Solutions to the viscous Taylor–Goldstein equations. The dispersion relation $\omega (k_x)$ is plotted in (a), with modes coloured by their growth rate. The lines represent different (linear) dispersion relations, where subscript max denotes maximum values, and subscript mean denotes the average value in the channel core region ($0.8 < y < 1.2$). The two highlighted modes correspond to those with the highest growth rates for $k_x = 4$. Their complex structure eigenfunctions $\hat {v}(y)$ and $\hat {b}(y)$ are reported in (be), with real components marked in black, complex components marked in grey, and the origin marked by the dotted black lines. Critical lines are marked in red, where the (streamwise) phase speed $\omega /k_x = \overline{U}$. In addition, the spatial structures $v(x,y)$ and $b(x,y)$, obtained from (3.11a,b) are plotted for one wavelength, in (be).

Figure 15

Figure 15. Time series of $z$-slice data focused on a turbulent ejection event in a Lagrangian frame of reference, where $t=0$ represents the start of the event. The streamwise coordinate is given by $x' = x - U_c t$ where $U_c$ is the temporally and spatially averaged velocity in the given window. Filled contours are TKE dissipation rate, overlaid by iso-contours of constant density with a difference between them of $0.1$. The thick solid contour represents $\rho = 0$. Negative contours are dashed lines, positive contours are solid lines. The grey regions indicate an unstable density field. The dashed box focuses on a single ejection event.

Figure 16

Figure 16. Time series of $z$-slice data focused on a turbulent ejection event in a Lagrangian frame of reference, where $t=0$ represents the start of the event. The streamwise coordinate is given by $x' = x - U_c t$ where $U_c$ is the temporally and spatially averaged velocity in the given window. Filled contours are TKE dissipation rate, overlaid by iso-contours of constant density with a difference between them of $0.1$. The thick solid contour represents $\rho = 0$. Negative contours are dashed lines, positive contours are solid lines. The grey regions indicate an unstable density field. The dashed box focuses on a single ejection event.

Figure 17

Figure 17. Time series of $z$-slice data focused on a turbulent ejection event in a Lagrangian frame of reference, where $t=0$ represents the start of the event. The streamwise coordinate is given by $x' = x - U_c t$ where $U_c$ is the average velocity in the given window. Filled contours are vertical momentum sources due to fluctuating pressure and density fields, overlaid by iso-contours of constant density with a difference between them of $\Delta \rho = 0.1$. The thick solid contour represents $\rho = 0$. Negative contours are dashed lines, positive contours are solid lines. The grey regions indicate turbulent events ($\varepsilon > 5$). The dashed box focuses on a single ejection event.

Figure 18

Figure 18. Vorticity field and budgets on a $z$-normal slice at $t=0.15$ of figure 15. Solid iso-contours are density with a difference between them of $0.1$. The thick solid contour represents $\rho = 0$. Negative contours are dashed lines, positive contours are solid lines. The dashed box focuses on a single ejection event.

Figure 19

Figure 19. Intermittency of the spatially averaged dissipation rates of TKE ($\varepsilon$) and buoyancy ($\mathcal {X}$) in the lower portion of the channel core ($y \in 0.8,1.0$), and the near-core portion of outer region ($y\in [0.5,0.8]$), in the interval $x' \in [0,{\rm \pi} ]$; $l_c$ is the length of the contour $\rho =0.2$ normalised by ${\rm \pi}$, such that $l_c=1$ corresponds to a perfectly flat contour. Grey regions correspond to peaks in $l_c$, indicative of wave-breaking ejection events.

Figure 20

Figure 20. Iso-surfaces of swirl strength, $\lambda _{ci}$, in the lower half of the channel for Case S, coloured by vertical coordinate $y$. The colour map is centred at $y=0.8$, such that ‘red’ regions highlight structures in the core region of the channel. The flow direction is approximately ‘north–west’. The $\lambda _{ci}$ contour value is 0.5 % of its maximum value.

Figure 21

Figure 21. An isolated hairpin vortex visualised by an iso-surface of swirl strength, $\lambda _{ci}$, in the lower half of channel for Case S (grey). Red and blue iso-surfaces represent $u' = 1$ and $u'=-1$, respectively (a), and $v' = 1$ and $v'=-1$, respectively (b). The $\lambda _{ci}$ contour value is 0.5 % of its maximum value.

Figure 22

Figure 22. Coherent hairpin structures visualised by $\lambda _{ci}$ with iso-surfaces of $u'=-1$ (green). Cases are U (a) and S (b). The $\lambda _{ci}$ contour value is 0.5 % of its maximum value. Both sets of iso-surfaces, $\lambda _{ci}$ and $u'$, are coloured by the vertical coordinate $y$.

Figure 23

Figure 23. Variation with $y$ of the integral shear parameter $S^{*} = \overline {u_i'u_i'} \partial _y \overline{U} /\varepsilon$ for Case U (solid line) and Case S (dashed line).

Figure 24

Figure 24. Profiles of time- and planar-averaged flow statistics. Solid lines represent Case S, dashed lines represent Case S2.

Figure 25

Figure 25. Profiles of time- and planar-averaged flow statistics for $\textit {Re}_\tau = 550$, $\textit {Ri}_\tau = 480$ and $\textit {Pr}=0.7$. Solid lines are LES data and dash-dotted lines are the DNS of Garcia-Villalba & del Alamo (2011).