342 research outputs found
Turbulent Fluid Flow Over Aerodynamically Rough Surfaces Using Direct Numerical Simulations
Incompressible turbulent fluid flow in aerodynamically rough channels is investigated
using direct numerical simulations. A comprehensive database of simulation
data for rough surfaces with different topographical properties has been developed
for 17 industrially relevant rough surface samples. It includes numerous commonlyseen
industrial rough surfaces such as concrete, graphite, carbon-carbon composite
and ground, shotblasted and spark-eroded steel. Other surfaces such as cast, filed
and gritblasted steel are also studied, along with replicas of ship propeller surfaces
eroded by periods of service. The Reynolds number considered is Reτ = 180, for
which the flow is in the transitionally rough regime. A study with variable δ/Sq ratio
while keeping S
+
q
constant, where Sq is the root mean squared roughness height,
is conducted for one of the samples with the mean profiles showing convergence
for δ/Sq >≈ 25. A Reynolds number dependence study is conducted for two of the
samples with Reτ up to 720 showing a more complete range up to the fully rough
flow regime, allowing the equivalent sandgrain roughness height, ks
to be computed.
A correlation based on the frontal and wetted roughness area is found to be superior
to the surface skewness in predicting ∆U
+ based on the topographic surface
parameters
The far green country.
This work was inspired by a beautiful image from J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings: “And then it seemed to him that as in his dream in the house of Bombadil, the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift sunrise.” ~The Return of The King, Book VI chapter 9. This imagery inspired the three movements of this work. The first, The Gray Raincurtain, depicts a violent end, the world crashing down around you. The musical material of this movement gradually unravels – the piece is built in several waves, each becoming more and more tumultuous and disturbed, until the final crest shatters and leaves a deafening silence in its wake. The second movement, Silver Glass, is an in-between place – a transformation from one state of being to another. The sound of silver glass is created with bowed percussion instruments, the rest of the orchestra gradually adding their voices to create a glistening halo of sound. The final movement, The Far Green Country, emerges from this halo and embodies the excitement and joy of arriving home after a long absence. This movement rotates through key centers, slowly adding accidentals to the orchestral texture, creating the feeling of running ever upward and upward, each step of the way more euphoric than the last
Parametric forcing approach to rough-wall turbulent channel flow
The effects of rough surfaces on turbulent channel flow are modelled by an extra force term in the Navier–Stokes equations. This force term contains two parameters, related to the density and the height of the roughness elements, and a shape function, which regulates the influence of the force term with respect to the distance from the channel wall. This permits a more flexible specification of a rough surface than a single parameter such as the equivalent sand grain roughness. The effects of the roughness force term on turbulent channel flow have been investigated for a large number of parameter combinations and several shape functions by direct numerical simulations. It is possible to cover the full spectrum of rough flows ranging from hydraulically smooth through transitionally rough to fully rough cases. By using different parameter combinations and shape functions, it is possible to match the effects of different types of rough surfaces. Mean flow and standard turbulence statistics have been used to compare the results to recent experimental and numerical studies and a good qualitative agreement has been found. Outer scaling is preserved for the streamwise velocity for both the mean profile as well as its mean square fluctuations in all but extremely rough cases. The structure of the turbulent flow shows a trend towards more isotropic turbulent states within the roughness layer. In extremely rough cases, spanwise structures emerge near the wall and the turbulent state resembles a mixing layer. A direct comparison with the study of Ashrafian, Andersson & Manhart (Intl J. Heat Fluid Flow, vol. 25, 2004, pp. 373–383) shows a good quantitative agreement of the mean flow and Reynolds stresses everywhere except in the immediate vicinity of the rough wall. The proposed roughness force term may be of benefit as a wall model for direct and large-eddy numerical simulations in cases where the exact details of the flow over a rough wall can be neglecte
Analysis of data on the relation between eddies and streaky structures in turbulent flows using the placebo method
An artificially synthesized velocity field with known properties is used as a test data set in analyzing and interpreting the turbulent flow velocity fields. The objective nature of this approach is utilized for studying the relation between streaky and eddy structures. An analysis shows that this relation may be less significant than is customarily supposed
Cross cultural verbal cues to deception: truth and lies in first and second language forensic interview contexts
Introduction: The verbal deception literature is largely based upon North American and Western European monolingual English speaker interactions. This
paper extends this literature by comparing the verbal behaviors of 88 south Asian bilinguals, conversing in either first (Hindi) or second (English) languages, and 48 British monolinguals conversing in English.
Methods: All participated in a live event following which they were interviewed having been incentivized to be either deceptive or truthful. Event details,
complications, verifiable sources, and plausibility ratings were analyzed as a function of veracity, language and culture.
Results: Main effects revealed cross cultural similarities in both first and second language interviews whereby all liar’s verbal responses were impoverished and rated as less plausible than truthtellers. However, a series of cross-cultural interactions emerged whereby bi-lingual South Asian truthtellers and liars interviewed in first
and second languages exhibited varying patterns of verbal behaviors, differences that have the potential to trigger erroneous assessments in practice.
Discussion: Despite limitations, including concerns centered on the reductionary nature of deception research, our results highlight that while cultural context is important, impoverished, simple verbal accounts should trigger a ‘red flag’ for
further attention irrespective of culture or interview language, since the cognitive load typically associated with formulating a deceptive account apparently
emerges in a broadly similar manner
Improving professional observers’ veracity judgments by tactical interviewing
Understanding whether a person of interest is being truthful during an investigative interview is a constant challenge and is of concern to numerous criminal justice professionals, most of whom are not involved in conducting the interview itself. Here, we investigated police observers’ veracity detection performance having viewed interviews with truthtellers and deceivers using either the tactical use of evidence (TUE), strategic use of evidence (SUE) or a control technique. Thirty serving police officers participated as post-interview observers and each viewed 12 interviews in a counterbalanced order. After each interview, the officer made a veracity judgement. Overall, untrained police observers were significantly more accurate (68%) when making veracity judgements post-TUE interviews, whereas for both SUE and control performance was around chance (51% and 48%, respectively). Veracity performance for liars and truthtellers revealed a similar pattern of results (67% liars; 70% truthtellers) in the TUE condition. These results lend further support to the psychological literature highlighting the importance of how and when to reveal evidence or any other relevant event information during an investigative interview for ‘outing’ deceivers as well as allowing truthtellers early opportunities to demonstrate their innocence
Direct numerical simulation of compressible turbulence in a counter-flow channel configuration
Counter-flow configurations, whereby two streams of fluid are brought together from opposite directions, are highly efficient mixers due to the high turbulence intensities that can be maintained. In this paper, a simplified version of the problem is introduced that is amenable to direct numerical simulation. The resulting turbulent flow problem is confined between two walls, with one non-zero mean velocity component varying in the space direction normal to the wall, corresponding to a simple shear flow. Compared to conventional channel flows, the mean flow is inflectional and the maximum turbulence intensity relative to the maximum mean velocity is nearly an order of magnitude higher. The numerical requirements and turbulence properties of this configuration are first determined. The Reynolds shear stress is required to vary linearly by the imposed forcing, with a peak at the channel centreline. A similar behaviour is observed for the streamwise Reynolds stress, the budget of which shows an approximately uniform distribution of dissipation, with large contributions from production, pressure-strain and turbulent diffusion. A viscous sublayer is obtained near the walls and with increasing Reynolds number small-scale streaks in the streamwise momentum are observed, superimposed on the large-scale structures that buffet this region. When the peak local mean Mach number reaches 0.55, turbulent Mach numbers of 0.6 are obtained, indicating that this flow configuration can be useful to study compressibility effects on turbulence
Change in drag, apparent slip and optimum air layer thickness for laminar flow over an idealised superhydrophobic surface
Analytic results are derived for the apparent slip length, the change in drag and the optimum air layer thickness of laminar channel and pipe flow over an idealised superhydrophobic surface, i.e. a gas layer of constant thickness retained on a wall. For a simple Couette flow the gas layer always has a drag reducing effect, and the apparent slip length is positive, assuming that there is a favourable viscosity contrast between liquid and gas. In pressure-driven pipe and channel flow blockage limits the drag reduction caused by the lubricating effects of the gas layer; thus an optimum gas layer thickness can be derived. The values for the change in drag and the apparent slip length are strongly affected by the assumptions made for the flow in the gas phase. The standard assumptions of a constant shear rate in the gas layer or an equal pressure gradient in the gas layer and liquid layer give considerably higher values for the drag reduction and the apparent slip length than an alternative assumption of a vanishing mass flow rate in the gas layer. Similarly, a minimum viscosity contrast of four must be exceeded to achieve drag reduction under the zero mass flow rate assumption whereas the drag can be reduced for a viscosity contrast greater than unity under the conventional assumptions. Thus, traditional formulae from lubrication theory lead to an overestimation of the optimum slip length and drag reduction when applied to superhydrophobic surfaces, where the gas is trapped
Applying a transdisciplinary mixed methods research design to explore sustainable diets in rural South Africa
This article describes a conceptual framework for exploring sustainable diets, using a case study example of ongoing research in the Vaalharts region, a rural setting in South Africa. A qualitative research approach is followed with an integrated transdisciplinary mixed methods research design with multiple concurrent components employed during two sequential phases. A successful application of the framework is achieved through a collaborative team effort of researchers with qualitative and quantitative research expertise transcending different disciplines, as well as participation of community members throughout the research process. We demonstrate that transdisciplinary mixed methods research designs are essential to gain a better understanding of the complex concept of sustainable diets
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