3 results
A critical analysis of turbulence dissipation in near-wall flows, based on stereo particle image velocimetry and direct numerical simulation data
- William K. George, Michel Stanislas, Jean Marc Foucaut, Christophe Cuvier, Jean Philippe Laval
-
- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 950 / 10 November 2022
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 13 October 2022, A2
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
An experiment was performed using stereo particle image velocimetry (SPIV) in the Laboratoire de Mécanique des Fluides de Lille boundary layer facility to determine all the derivative moments needed to estimate the average dissipation rate of the turbulence kinetic energy $\epsilon = 2 \nu \langle {\mathsf{s}}_{ij}{\mathsf{s}}_{ij} \rangle$, where ${\mathsf{s}}_{ij}$ is the fluctuating strain rate and $\langle ~\rangle$ denotes ensemble averages. Also measured were all the moments of the full average deformation rate tensor, as well as all of the first, second and third fluctuating velocity moments except those involving pressure. The Reynolds number was $Re_\theta = 7634$ or $Re_\tau = 2598$. The present paper gives the measured average dissipation, $\epsilon$ and the derivative moments comprising it. The results are compared with the earlier measurements of Balint, Wallace & Vukolavcevic (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 228, 1991, pp. 53–86) and Honkan & Andreopoulos (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 350, 1997, pp. 29–96) at lower Reynolds numbers and to new results from a plane channel flow DNS at comparable Reynolds number. Of special interest is the prediction by George & Castillo (Appl. Mech. Rev., vol. 50, 1997, pp. 689–729) and Wosnik, Castillo & George (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 421, 2000, pp. 115–145) that $\epsilon ^+ \propto {x_2^+}^{-1}$ for streamwise homogeneous flows and a nearly indistinguishable power law, $\epsilon \propto {x_2^+}^{\gamma -1}$, for boundary layers. In spite of the modest Reynolds number, the predictions seem to be correct. Then the statistical character of the velocity derivatives is examined in detail, and a particular problem is identified with the breakdown of local homogeneity inside $x_2^+ = 100$. A more general alternative for partially homogeneous turbulence flows is offered which is consistent with the observations. With the help of DNS, the spatial characteristics of the dissipation very near the wall are also examined in detail.
Space–time pressure–velocity correlations in a turbulent boundary layer
- Yoshitsugu Naka, Michel Stanislas, Jean-Marc Foucaut, Sebastien Coudert, Jean-Philippe Laval, Shinnosuke Obi
-
- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 771 / 25 May 2015
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 April 2015, pp. 624-675
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The spatio-temporal pressure–velocity correlation in a turbulent boundary layer is investigated so as to understand the link between pressure fluctuations and turbulent coherent structures. A new experimental set-up is developed to measure the pressure fluctuations at the wall and in the field and, simultaneously, the velocity field by stereoscopic particle image velocimetry. The present measurement area covers the whole boundary layer thickness, and the spatial resolution of the measurement is good enough to assess the representative length scales of the flow. The Reynolds number effect is quantified from the data at $\mathit{Re}_{{\it\theta}}=7300$, 10 000, 18 000. The spatio-temporal three-dimensional structures of the pressure–velocity correlations, $\boldsymbol{R}_{pu}$, $\boldsymbol{R}_{pv}$ and $\boldsymbol{R}_{pw}$, are evaluated. The wall pressure fluctuations are closely coupled with coherent structures which occupy a large region of the boundary layer in the wall-normal and spanwise directions and up to $10{\it\delta}/U_{e}$ in time, where ${\it\delta}$ and $U_{e}$ denote the boundary layer thickness and the free stream velocity. Reynolds number effects are mainly observed on the size and intensity of the pressure–velocity correlations. Conditioning the correlations on the pressure signal sign shows different types of flow phenomena linked to the positive and negative pressure events. For the wall pressure, positive pressure fluctuations appear to be correlated with the leading edge of a large sweeping motion of splatting type followed by a large ejection. The negative pressure fluctuations are linked to a localized ejection upstream, followed by a large sweeping motion downstream. For the pressure fluctuations in the field, in addition to the structures observed with the wall pressure, the pressure–velocity correlations exhibit a significant correlation in a region very extended in time. Such long structures appear to be independent of the one observed at the wall and to grow significantly in time with the Reynolds number when scaling with external variables. When conditioned by the pressure sign, clear ejection and sweeping motions are observed with associated streamwise vortical structures at a scale of the order of $0.2{\it\delta}$. These structures can be linked to the large-scale motion and very-large-scale motion previously observed by different authors and seem to organize in a scheme analogous to the near-wall cycle, but at a much larger scale.
Instability of streaks in wall turbulence with adverse pressure gradient
- MATTHIEU MARQUILLIE, UWE EHRENSTEIN, JEAN-PHILIPPE LAVAL
-
- Journal:
- Journal of Fluid Mechanics / Volume 681 / 25 August 2011
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 June 2011, pp. 205-240
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
A direct numerical simulation of a turbulent channel flow with a lower curved wall is performed at Reynolds number Reτ ≈ 600. Low-speed streak structures are extracted from the turbulent flow field using methods known as skeletonization in image processing. Individual streaks in the wall-normal plane averaged in time and superimposed to the mean streamwise velocity profile are used as basic states for a linear stability analysis. Instability modes are computed at positions along the lower and upper wall and the instability onset is shown to coincide with the strong production peaks of turbulent kinetic energy near the maximum of pressure gradient on both the curved and the flat walls. The instability modes are spanwise-symmetric (varicose) for the adverse pressure gradient streak base flows with wall-normal inflection points, when the total average of the detected streaks is considered. The size and shape of the counter-rotating streamwise vortices associated with the instability modes are shown to be reminiscent of the coherent vortices emerging from the streak skeletons in the direct numerical simulation. Conditional averages of streaks have also been computed and the distance of the streak's centre from the wall is shown to be an essential parameter. For the upper-wall weak pressure gradient flow, spanwise-antisymmetric (sinuous) instability modes become unstable when sets of highest streaks are considered, whereas varicose modes dominate for the streaks closest to the wall.