Vorticity-Based Conditional Sampling for Identification of Large-Scale Vortical Structures in Turbulent Shear Flows

Author(s):  
M. Hayakawa
1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Bonnet ◽  
J. Delville ◽  
M. Glauser ◽  
J. Bonnet ◽  
J. Delville ◽  
...  

For over a quarter of a century it has been recognized that turbulent shear flows are dominated by large-scale structures. Yet the majority of models for turbulent mixing fail to include the properties of the structures either explicitly or implicitly. The results obtained using these models may appear to be satisfactory, when compared with experimental observations, but in general these models require the inclusion of empirical constants, which render the predictions only as good as the empirical database used in the determination of such constants. Existing models of turbulence also fail to provide, apart from its stochastic properties, a description of the time-dependent properties of a turbulent shear flow and its development. In this paper we introduce a model for the large-scale structures in a turbulent shear layer. Although, with certain reservations, the model is applicable to most turbulent shear flows, we restrict ourselves here to the consideration of turbulent mixing in a two-stream compressible shear layer. Two models are developed for this case that describe the influence of the large-scale motions on the turbulent mixing process. The first model simulates the average behaviour by calculating the development of the part of the turbulence spectrum related to the large-scale structures in the flow. The second model simulates the passage of a single train of large-scale structures, thereby modelling a significant part of the time-dependent features of the turbulent flow. In both these treatments the large-scale structures are described by a superposition of instability waves. The local properties of these waves are determined from linear, inviscid, stability analysis. The streamwise development of the mean flow, which includes the amplitude distribution of these instability waves, is determined from an energy integral analysis. The models contain no empirical constants. Predictions are made for the effects of freestream velocity and density ratio as well as freestream Mach number on the growth of the mixing layer. The predictions agree very well with experimental observations. Calculations are also made for the time-dependent motion of the turbulent shear layer in the form of streaklines that agree qualitatively with observation. For some other turbulent shear flows the dominant structure of the large eddies can be obtained similarly using linear stability analysis and a partial justification for this procedure is given in the Appendix. In wall-bounded flows a preliminary analysis indicates that a linear, viscous, stability analysis must be extended to second order to derive the most unstable waves and their subsequent development. The extension of the present model to such cases and the inclusion of the effects of chemical reactions in the models are also discussed.


2002 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnaud Prigent ◽  
Guillaume Grégoire ◽  
Hugues Chaté ◽  
Olivier Dauchot ◽  
Wim van Saarloos

Author(s):  
Carlo Cossu ◽  
Yongyun Hwang

We collect and discuss the results of our recent studies which show evidence of the existence of a whole family of self-sustaining motions in wall-bounded turbulent shear flows with scales ranging from those of buffer-layer streaks to those of large-scale and very-large-scale motions in the outer layer. The statistical and dynamical features of this family of self-sustaining motions, which are associated with streaks and quasi-streamwise vortices, are consistent with those of Townsend’s attached eddies. Motions at each relevant scale are able to sustain themselves in the absence of forcing from larger- or smaller-scale motions by extracting energy from the mean flow via a coherent lift-up effect. The coherent self-sustaining process is embedded in a set of invariant solutions of the filtered Navier–Stokes equations which take into full account the Reynolds stresses associated with the residual smaller-scale motions. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Toward the development of high-fidelity models of wall turbulence at large Reynolds number’.


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