scholarly journals Extension to various thermal boundary conditions of the elliptic blending model for the turbulent heat flux and the temperature variance

2020 ◽  
Vol 905 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaëtan Mangeon ◽  
Sofiane Benhamadouche ◽  
Jean-François Wald ◽  
Rémi Manceau

Abstract

Author(s):  
I. Otic´ ◽  
G. Gro¨tzbach

Results of direct numerical simulation (DNS) of turbulent Rayleigh-Be´nard convection for a Prandtl number Pr = 0.025 and a Rayleigh number Ra = 105 are used to evaluate the turbulent heat flux and the temperature variance. The DNS evaluated turbulent heat flux is compared with the DNS based results of a standard gradient diffusion turbulent heat flux model and with the DNS based results of a standard algebraic turbulent heat flux model. The influence of the turbulence time scales on the predictions by the standard algebraic heat flux model at these Rayleigh- and Prandtl numbers is investigated. A four equation algebraic turbulent heat flux model based on the transport equations for the turbulent kinetic energy k, for the dissipation of the turbulent kinetic energy ε, for the temperature variance θ2, and for the temperature variance dissipation rate εθ is proposed. This model should be applicable to a wide range of low Prandtl number flows.


2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahiro MIURA ◽  
Koji MATSUBARA ◽  
Atsushi SAKURAI

1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 405-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kim ◽  
T. W. Simon ◽  
M. Kestoras

An experimental investigation of transition on a flat-plate boundary layer was performed. Mean and turbulence quantities, including turbulent heat flux, were sampled according to the intermittency function. Such sampling allows segregation of the signal into two types of behavior—laminarlike and turbulentlike. Results show that during transition these two types of behavior cannot be thought of as separate Blasius and fully turbulent profiles, respectively. Thus, simple transition models in which the desired quantity is assumed to be an average, weighted on intermittency, of the laminar and fully turbulent values may not be entirely successful. Deviation of the flow identified as laminarlike from theoretical laminar behavior is due to a slow recovery after the passage of a turbulent spot, while deviation of the flow identified as turbulentlike from fully turbulent characteristics is possibly due to an incomplete establishment of the fully turbulent power spectral distribution. Measurements were taken for two levels of free-stream disturbance—0.32 and 1.79 percent. Turbulent Prandtl numbers for the transitional flow, computed from measured shear stress, turbulent heat flux, and mean velocity and temperature profiles, were less than unity.


2013 ◽  
Vol 723 ◽  
pp. 91-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. M. J. Lazeroms ◽  
G. Brethouwer ◽  
S. Wallin ◽  
A. V. Johansson

AbstractThis work describes the derivation of an algebraic model for the Reynolds stresses and turbulent heat flux in stably stratified turbulent flows, which are mutually coupled for this type of flow. For general two-dimensional mean flows, we present a correct way of expressing the Reynolds-stress anisotropy and the (normalized) turbulent heat flux as tensorial combinations of the mean strain rate, the mean rotation rate, the mean temperature gradient and gravity. A system of linear equations is derived for the coefficients in these expansions, which can easily be solved with computer algebra software for a specific choice of the model constants. The general model is simplified in the case of parallel mean shear flows where the temperature gradient is aligned with gravity. For this case, fully explicit and coupled expressions for the Reynolds-stress tensor and heat-flux vector are given. A self-consistent derivation of this model would, however, require finding a root of a polynomial equation of sixth-order, for which no simple analytical expression exists. Therefore, the nonlinear part of the algebraic equations is modelled through an approximation that is close to the consistent formulation. By using the framework of a$K\text{{\ndash}} \omega $model (where$K$is turbulent kinetic energy and$\omega $an inverse time scale) and, where needed, near-wall corrections, the model is applied to homogeneous shear flow and turbulent channel flow, both with stable stratification. For the case of homogeneous shear flow, the model predicts a critical Richardson number of 0.25 above which the turbulent kinetic energy decays to zero. The channel-flow results agree well with DNS data. Furthermore, the model is shown to be robust and approximately self-consistent. It also fulfils the requirements of realizability.


Author(s):  
G. X. Li ◽  
W. Q. Tao ◽  
Z. Y. Li ◽  
B. Yu

Direct numerical simulation has been carried out to investigate the effect of weak rarefaction on turbulent gas flow and heat transfer characteristics in mirochannel. The Reynolds number based on the friction velocity and the channel half width is 150. Grid number is 64×128×64. Fractional time step method is employed for the unsteady Navier-Stokes equations, and the governing equations are discretized with Finite Difference Method. Statistical quantities such as turbulent intensity, Reynolds shear stress, turbulent heat flux and temperature variance are obtained under various Knudsen number from 0 to 0.05. The results show that rarefaction can influence the turbulent flow and heat transfer statistics. The streamwise mean velocity and temperature increase with increase of Kn number. In the near wall region rarefaction can increase the turbulent intensities and temperature variance. The effect of rarefaction on Reynolds shear stress and wall-normal heat flux are presented. The instantaneous velocity fluctuations in the vicinity of the wall are visualized and the influence of Kn number on the flow structure is discussed.


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