1,119 research outputs found

    A lattice Boltzmann study of non-hydrodynamic effects in shell models of turbulence

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    A lattice Boltzmann scheme simulating the dynamics of shell models of turbulence is developed. The influence of high order kinetic modes (ghosts) on the dissipative properties of turbulence dynamics is studied. It is analytically found that when ghost fields relax on the same time scale as the hydrodynamic ones, their major effect is a net enhancement of the fluid viscosity. The bare fluid viscosity is recovered by letting ghost fields evolve on a much longer time scale. Analytical results are borne out by high-resolution numerical simulations. These simulations indicate that the hydrodynamic manifold is very robust towards large fluctuations of non hydrodynamic fields.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physica

    On the Heat Transfer in Rayleigh-Benard systems

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    In this paper we discuss some theoretical aspects concerning the scaling laws of the Nusselt number versus the Rayleigh number in a Rayleigh-Benard cell. We present a new set of numerical simulations and compare our findings against the predictions of existing models. We then propose a new theory which relies on the hypothesis of Bolgiano scaling. Our approach generalizes the one proposed by Kadanoff, Libchaber and coworkers and solves some of the inconsistencies raised in the recent literature.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure

    Universality in passively advected hydrodynamic fields: the case of a passive vector with pressure

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    Universality of statistical properties of passive quantities advected by turbulent velocity fields at changing the passive forcing mechanism is discussed. In particular, we concentrate on the statistical properties of an hydrodynamic system with pressure. We present theoretical arguments and preliminary numerical results which show that the fluxes of passive vector field and of the velocity field have the same scaling behavior. By exploiting such a property, we propose a way to compute the anomalous exponents of three dimensional turbulent velocity fields. Our findings are in agreement within 5% with experimental values of the anomalous exponents.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure

    Double scaling and intermittency in shear dominated flows

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    The Refined Kolmogorov Similarity Hypothesis is a valuable tool for the description of intermittency in isotropic conditions. For flows in presence of a substantial mean shear, the nature of intermittency changes since the process of energy transfer is affected by the turbulent kinetic energy production associated with the Reynolds stresses. In these conditions a new form of refined similarity law has been found able to describe the increased level of intermittency which characterizes shear dominated flows. Ideally a length scale associated with the mean shear separates the two ranges, i.e. the classical Kolmogorov-like inertial range, below, and the shear dominated range, above. However, the data analyzed in previous papers correspond to conditions where the two scaling regimes can only be observed individually. In the present letter we give evidence of the coexistence of the two regimes and support the conjecture that the statistical properties of the dissipation field are practically insensible to the mean shear. This allows for a theoretical prediction of the scaling exponents of structure functions in the shear dominated range based on the known intermittency corrections for isotropic flows. The prediction is found to closely match the available numerical and experimental data.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR

    Intermittency and the Slow Approach to Kolmogorov Scaling

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    From a simple path integral involving a variable volatility in the velocity differences, we obtain velocity probability density functions with exponential tails, resembling those observed in fully developed turbulence. The model yields realistic scaling exponents and structure functions satisfying extended self-similarity. But there is an additional small scale dependence for quantities in the inertial range, which is linked to a slow approach to Kolmogorov (1941) scaling occurring in the large distance limit.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, minor changes to mirror version to appear in PR

    A new scaling property of turbulent flows

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    We discuss a possible theoretical interpretation of the self scaling property of turbulent flows (Extended Self Similarity). Our interpretation predicts that, even in cases when ESS is not observed, a generalized self scaling, must be observed. This prediction is checked on a number of laboratory experiments and direct numerical simulations.Comment: Plain Latex, 1 figure available upon request to [email protected]

    Mesoscopic modeling of heterogeneous boundary conditions for microchannel flows

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    We present a mesoscopic model of the fluid-wall interactions for flows in microchannel geometries. We define a suitable implementation of the boundary conditions for a discrete version of the Boltzmann equations describing a wall-bounded single phase fluid. We distinguish different slippage properties on the surface by introducing a slip function, defining the local degree of slip for mesoscopic molecules at the boundaries. The slip function plays the role of a renormalizing factor which incorporates, with some degree of arbitrariness, the microscopic effects on the mesoscopic description. We discuss the mesoscopic slip properties in terms of slip length, slip velocity, pressure drop reduction (drag reduction), and mass flow rate in microchannels as a function of the degree of slippage and of its spatial distribution and localization, the latter parameter mimicking the degree of roughness of the ultra-hydrophobic material in real experiments. We also discuss the increment of the slip length in the transition regime, i.e. at O(1) Knudsen numbers. Finally, we compare our results with Molecular Dynamics investigations of the dependency of the slip length on the mean channel pressure and local slip properties (Cottin-Bizonne et al. 2004) and with the experimental dependency of the pressure drop reduction on the percentage of hydrophobic material deposited on the surface -- Ou et al. (2004).Comment: 21 pages, 10 figure

    Surface Roughness-Hydrophobicity Coupling in Microchannel and Nanochannel Flows

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    An approach based on a lattice version of the Boltzmann kinetic equation for describing multiphase flows in nano- and microcorrugated devices is proposed. We specialize it to describe the wetting-dewetting transition of fluids in the presence of nanoscopic grooves etched on the boundaries. This approach permits us to retain the essential supramolecular details of fluid-solid interactions without surrenderingÂżactually boostingÂżthe computational efficiency of continuum methods. The method is used to analyze the importance of conspiring effects between hydrophobicity and roughness on the global mass flow rate of the microchannel. In particular we show that smart surfaces can be tailored to yield very different mass throughput by changing the bulk pressure. The mesoscopic method is also validated quantitatively against the molecular dynamics results of [Cottin-Bizonne et al., Nat. Mater. 2, 237 (2003)]

    Cooperativity flows and Shear-Bandings: a statistical field theory approach

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    Cooperativity effects have been proposed to explain the non-local rheology in the dynamics of soft jammed systems. Based on the analysis of the free-energy model proposed by L. Bocquet, A. Colin \& A. Ajdari ({\em Phys. Rev. Lett.} {\bf 103}, 036001 (2009)), we show that cooperativity effects resulting from the non-local nature of the fluidity (inverse viscosity), are intimately related to the emergence of shear-banding configurations. This connection materializes through the onset of inhomogeneous compact solutions (compactons), wherein the fluidity is confined to finite-support subregions of the flow and strictly zero elsewhere. Compactons coexistence with regions of zero fluidity ("non-flowing vacuum") is shown to be stabilized by the presence of mechanical noise, which ultimately shapes up the equilibrium distribution of the fluidity field, the latter acting as an order parameter for the flow-noflow transitions occurring in the material.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figure
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