6 research outputs found

    Temporal characteristics of the probability density function of velocity in wall-bounded turbulent flows

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    The probability density function (p.d.f.) of the streamwise velocity has been shown to indicate the presence of uniform momentum zones in wall-bounded turbulent flows. Most studies on the topic have focused on the instantaneous characteristics of this p.d.f. In this work, we show how the use of time-resolved particle image velocimetry data highlights robust features in the temporal behaviour of the p.d.f. and how these patterns are associated with the change of the number of zones present in the flow over time. The use of a limited resolvent model provides a clear link between this experimentally observed behaviour and the underlying velocity structures and their phase characteristics. This link is further supported by an extended resolvent model consisting of self-similar hierarchies centred in the logarithmic region, with triadically consistent members, yielding much more complex patterns in the p.d.f. Results indicate that the geometric similarity of these members instantaneously, as well as their relative evolution in time (dictated by their wall-normal varying wave speed), both inherent to the model, can reproduce many experimentally identified features.Multi Phase System

    Effect of incoming boundary layer characteristics on an air layer within a liquid turbulent boundary layer

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    An air layer within a liquid turbulent boundary layer (TBL) is formed by controlled air injection underneath a flat plate. The incoming boundary layer as well as the flow around the air layer were measured with planar particle image velocimetry (PIV). The effect of different incoming liquid flow characteristics on the air layer geometry is investigated by varying both the freestream velocity and the streamwise development length of the TBL. The latter was realized through changing the position of the air injection along the length of the water tunnel facility. Increasing the freestream velocity resulted in an increase of the air layer length, while its maximum thickness remained relatively unaltered. An increase in the TBL development length, had a similarly marginal effect on the resulting maximum air layer thickness but led to a shorter air layer length. The latter could be attributed to a decrease in local mean velocity due to the TBL growth, reflected in a decrease of the air layer to boundary layer thickness ratio (from 0.27 to 0.17). The results of this study are expected to provide insight on the design conditions of an air layer drag reduction system installed in the hull of a ship.Multi Phase SystemsProcess and EnergyShip Hydromechanics and Structure

    Spatiotemporal characteristics of uniform momentum zones: Experiments and modeling

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    The probability density function (PDF) of the instantaneous streamwise velocity has consistently been used to extract information on the formation of uniform momentum zones (UMZs) in wall-bounded flows. Its temporal evolution has previously revealed patterns associated with the geometry and amplitude of the underlying velocity fluctuations [Laskari and McKeon, J. Fluid Mech. 913, A6 (2021)0022-112010.1017/jfm.2020.1163]. In this paper, we examine the robustness of these patterns in a variety of data sets including experiments and wall-bounded flow models. Experimental data sets spanning a range of Reynolds numbers, with very long temporal and spatial domains, suggest that the rate of the observed temporal variations scales in inner units. The use of a convection velocity, uniform across heights, to transform space into time has a marginal effect on these features. Similarly, negligible effects are observed between internal and external geometries. Synthetic databases generated following the resolvent framework and the attached eddy model are employed to draw comparisons to the experimental databases. Our findings highlight the distinctive strengths of each: The broadband frequency input of the attached eddy model allows for a better statistical description as opposed to a narrow frequency input in the resolvent data sets; instantaneously, however, representative eddies are seen to lack some structural details leading to the observed temporal behavior, which is better replicated by resolvent modes. Overall, given the considerable variety of the input data tested, the agreement between the data sets highlights the robustness of the spatiotemporal characteristics of the examined UMZs. It also underpins the need for their proper inclusion in UMZ modeling from a statistical as well as an instantaneous viewpoint; the current analysis accentuates important performance indicators for both.Multi Phase System

    Control of instability by injection rate oscillations in a radial Hele-Shaw cell

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    Small spatial perturbations grow into fingers along the unstable interface of a fluid displacing a more viscous fluid in a porous medium or a Hele-Shaw cell. Mitigating this Saffman-Taylor instability increases the efficiency of fluid displacement applications (e.g., oil recovery), whereas amplifying these perturbations is desirable in, e.g., mixing applications. In this work, we investigate the Saffman-Taylor instability through analysis and experiments in which air injected with an oscillatory flow rate outwardly displaces silicone oil in a radial Hele-Shaw cell. A solution for linear instability growth that shows the competing effects of radial growth and surface tension, including wetting effects, is defined given an arbitrary reference condition. We use this solution to define a condition for stability relative to the constant flow rate case and make initial numerical predictions of instability growth by wave number for a variety of oscillations. These solutions are then modified by incorporating reference conditions from experimental data. The morphological evolution of the interface is tracked as the air bubble expands and displaces oil between the plates. Using the resulting images, we analyze and compare the linear growth of perturbations about the mean interfacial radius for constant injection rates with and without superimposed oscillations. Three distinct types of flow rate oscillations are found to modulate experimental linear growth over a constant phase-averaged rate of fluid displacement. In particular, instability growth at the interface is mildly mitigated by adding to the base flow rate provided by a peristaltic pump a second flow with low-frequency oscillations of small magnitude and, to a lesser extent, high-frequency oscillations of large amplitude. In both cases, the increased stability results from the selective suppression of the growth of large wave numbers in the linear regime. Contrarily, intermediate oscillations consistently destabilize the interface and significantly amplify the growth of the most unstable wave numbers of the constant flow rate case. Numerical predictions of low-frequency oscillations of opposite sign (initially decreasing) show promise of even greater mitigation of linear instability growth than that observed in this investigation. Looking forward, proper characterization of the unsteady, wetting, and nonlinear dynamics of instability growth will give further insight into the efficacy of oscillatory injection rates.Multi Phase System

    Comparative assessment of PIV-based pressure evaluation techniques applied to a transonic base flow

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    A test case for PIV-based pressure evaluation techniques has been developed by constructing a simulated experiment from a ZDES simulation for an axisymmetric base flow at Mach 0.7. The test case comprises sequences of four subsequent particle images (representing multi-pulse data) as well as continuous time-resolved data. Particle images were processed using tomographic PIV processing as well as the PTV algorithm ‘Shake-The-Box’. Multiple pressure reconstruction techniques have subsequently been applied to the PIV results (Eulerian approach, iterative least-square pseudo-tracking, Taylor’s hypothesis approach, instantaneous Vortex-in-Cell) and PTV results (FlowFit, Vortex-in-Cell-plus, Voronoi-based pressure evaluation and iterative least-square pseudo-tracking). All methods were able to reconstruct the main features of the instantaneous pressure fields, including methods that reconstruct pressure from a single PIV velocity snapshot. Highly accurate pressure field reconstructions could be obtained by using PTV approaches in combination with more advanced techniques. In general, the use of longer series of time-resolved input data, when available, allows more accurate pressure field reconstruction. Noise in the input data typically reduces the accuracy of the reconstructed pressure fields, but none of the techniques was found to be critically sensitive to the amount of noise added in the present test caseAerodynamic

    Comparative assessment of pressure field reconstructions from particle image velocimetry measurements and Lagrangian particle tracking

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    A test case for pressure field reconstruction from particle image velocimetry (PIV) and Lagrangian particle tracking (LPT) has been developed by constructing a simulated experiment from a zonal detached eddy simulation for an axisymmetric base flow at Mach 0.7. The test case comprises sequences of four subsequent particle images (representing multi-pulse data) as well as continuous time-resolved data which can realistically only be obtained for low-speed flows. Particle images were processed using tomographic PIV processing as well as the LPT algorithm ‘Shake-The-Box’ (STB). Multiple pressure field reconstruction techniques have subsequently been applied to the PIV results (Eulerian approach, iterative least-square pseudo-tracking, Taylor’s hypothesis approach, and instantaneous Vortex-in-Cell) and LPT results (FlowFit, Vortex-in-Cell-plus, Voronoi-based pressure evaluation, and iterative least-square pseudo-tracking). All methods were able to reconstruct the main features of the instantaneous pressure fields, including methods that reconstruct pressure from a single PIV velocity snapshot. Highly accurate reconstructed pressure fields could be obtained using LPT approaches in combination with more advanced techniques. In general, the use of longer series of time-resolved input data, when available, allows more accurate pressure field reconstruction. Noise in the input data typically reduces the accuracy of the reconstructed pressure fields, but none of the techniques proved to be critically sensitive to the amount of noise added in the present test case.Aerodynamic
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