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Streamwise-varying steady transpiration control in turbulent pipe flow

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:50 authored by Francisco Gomez Carrasco, H. Blackburn, Murray Rudman, Ati Sharma, Beverley McKeon
The effect of streamwise-varying steady transpiration on turbulent pipe flow is examined using direct numerical simulation at fixed friction Reynolds number . The streamwise momentum equation reveals three physical mechanisms caused by transpiration acting in the flow: modification of Reynolds shear stress, steady streaming and generation of non-zero mean streamwise gradients. The influence of these mechanisms has been examined by means of a parameter sweep involving transpiration amplitude and wavelength. The observed trends have permitted identification of wall transpiration configurations able to reduce or increase the overall flow rate and, respectively. Energetics associated with these modifications are presented. A novel resolvent formulation has been developed to investigate the dynamics of pipe flows with a constant cross-section but with time-mean spatial periodicity induced by changes in boundary conditions. This formulation, based on a triple decomposition, paves the way for understanding turbulence in such flows using only the mean velocity profile. Resolvent analysis based on the time-mean flow and dynamic mode decomposition based on simulation data snapshots have both been used to obtain a description of the reorganization of the flow structures caused by the transpiration. We show that the pipe flows dynamics are dominated by a critical-layer mechanism and the waviness induced in the flow structures plays a role on the streamwise momentum balance by generating additional terms.

Funding

Designing textured roughness to control turbulent pipe flow

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Journal of Fluid Mechanics

Volume

796

Start page

588

End page

616

Total pages

29

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Cambridge University Press.

Former Identifier

2006073148

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-06-07

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