235 research outputs found
Pressure Hessian and viscous contributions to velocity gradient statistics based on Gaussian random fields
Understanding the non-local pressure contributions and viscous effects on the
small-scale statistics remains one of the central challenges in the study of
homogeneous isotropic turbulence. Here we address this issue by studying the
impact of the pressure Hessian as well as viscous diffusion on the statistics
of the velocity gradient tensor in the framework of an exact statistical
evolution equation. This evolution equation shares similarities with earlier
phenomenological models for the Lagrangian velocity gradient tensor evolution,
yet constitutes the starting point for a systematic study of the unclosed
pressure Hessian and viscous diffusion terms. Based on the assumption of
incompressible Gaussian velocity fields, closed expressions are obtained as the
results of an evaluation of the characteristic functionals. The benefits and
shortcomings of this Gaussian closure are discussed, and a generalization is
proposed based on results from direct numerical simulations. This enhanced
Gaussian closure yields, for example, insights on how the pressure Hessian
prevents the finite-time singularity induced by the local self-amplification
and how its interaction with viscous effects leads to the characteristic strain
skewness phenomenon
Flow visualization using momentum and energy transport tubes and applications to turbulent flow in wind farms
As a generalization of the mass-flux based classical stream-tube, the concept
of momentum and energy transport tubes is discussed as a flow visualization
tool. These transport tubes have the property, respectively, that no fluxes of
momentum or energy exist over their respective tube mantles. As an example
application using data from large-eddy simulation, such tubes are visualized
for the mean-flow structure of turbulent flow in large wind farms, in fully
developed wind-turbine-array boundary layers. The three-dimensional
organization of energy transport tubes changes considerably when turbine
spacings are varied, enabling the visualization of the path taken by the
kinetic energy flux that is ultimately available at any given turbine within
the array.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Fluid Mechanic
Dynamic Model for LES Without Test Filtering: Quantifying the Accuracy of Taylor Series Approximations
The dynamic model for large-eddy simulation (LES) of turbulent flows requires
test filtering the resolved velocity fields in order to determine model
coefficients. However, test filtering is costly to perform in large-eddy
simulation of complex geometry flows, especially on unstructured grids. The
objective of this work is to develop and test an approximate but less costly
dynamic procedure which does not require test filtering. The proposed method is
based on Taylor series expansions of the resolved velocity fields. Accuracy is
governed by the derivative schemes used in the calculation and the number of
terms considered in the approximation to the test filtering operator. The
expansion is developed up to fourth order, and results are tested a priori
based on direct numerical simulation data of forced isotropic turbulence in the
context of the dynamic Smagorinsky model. The tests compare the dynamic
Smagorinsky coefficient obtained from filtering with those obtained from
application of the Taylor series expansion. They show that the expansion up to
second order provides a reasonable approximation to the true dynamic
coefficient (with errors on the order of about 5 % for c_s^2), but that
including higher-order terms does not necessarily lead to improvements in the
results due to inherent limitations in accurately evaluating high-order
derivatives. A posteriori tests using the Taylor series approximation in LES of
forced isotropic turbulence and channel flow confirm that the Taylor series
approximation yields accurate results for the dynamic coefficient. Moreover,
the simulations are stable and yield accurate resolved velocity statistics.Comment: submitted to Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics, 20 pages,
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Deformation statistics of sub-Kolmogorov-scale ellipsoidal neutrally buoyant drops in isotropic turbulence
Small droplets in turbulent flows can undergo highly variable deformations
and orientational dynamics. For neutrally buoyant droplets smaller than the
Kolmogorov scale, the dominant effects from the surrounding turbulent flow
arise through Lagrangian time histories of the velocity gradient tensor. Here
we study the evolution of representative droplets using a model that includes
rotation and stretching effects from the surrounding fluid, and restoration
effects from surface tension including a constant droplet volume constraint,
while assuming that the droplets maintain an ellipsoidal shape. The model is
combined with Lagrangian time histories of the velocity gradient tensor
extracted from DNS of turbulence to obtain simulated droplet evolutions. These
are used to characterize the size, shape and orientation statistics of small
droplets in turbulence. A critical capillary number, is identified
associated with unbounded growth of one or two of the droplet's semi-axes.
Exploiting analogies with dynamics of polymers in turbulence, the number
can be predicted based on the large deviation theory for the largest Finite
Time Lyapunov exponent. Also, for sub-critical the theory enables
predictions of the slope of the power-law tails of droplet size distributions
in turbulence. For cases when the viscosities of droplet and outer fluid differ
in a way that enables vorticity to decorrelate the shape from the straining
directions, the large deviation formalism based on the stretching properties of
the velocity gradient tensor loses validity and its predictions fail. Even
considering the limitations of the assumed ellipsoidal droplet shape, the
results highlight the complex coupling between droplet deformation, orientation
and the local fluid velocity gradient tensor to be expected when small viscous
drops interact with turbulent flows
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