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Computational simulation of transition to turbulence through inverse modeling

Abstract

The present investigation has focused on a computational methodology for the fundamental case of transition in channel flow, in which recently published experimental data are utilized both as a stimulus and as a measure of merit of the method. The research has proceeded along three avenues in parallel. The first task has consisted of the development and verification of a computer code which calculates the mean evolution of flow in a channel similar to the one employed experimentally by Blair and Anderson. An analytical test case was created for the dual purposes of code verification and of highlighting the interactions between the Reynolds stress and the mean velocity profile. This test case generated a Reynolds stress by the residue in the momentum equation which is produced by a typical analytical velocity profile. By a substitution of this Reynolds stress into the appropriate code module, the correctness of the code may be verified, along with the accuracy of the computational method. The second task pursued has involved the development of a triple layer model for the Reynolds stress profile, which was suggested and derived from experimental velocity profiles. It is demonstrated that the innermost length scale is based on the local friction velocity, the intermediate layer corresponds to the usual logarithmic law of the wall region in which the normalized Reynolds stress is approximately unity, and the outermost layer is represented by a closed mathematical form depending explicitly on the velocity profile in the wake region. The third task was comprised of scrutiny of the excellent databases developed by Blair and others, and the planning of its incorporation into the transition analysis. These extensive measurements indicate that turbulent statistics in the transition regime may be considered to alternate between laminar and fully turbulent types, the proportions of which are quantified by a measured intermittency function

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