Direct numerical simulation of the turbulent boundary layer over a cube-roughened wall

2011 ◽  
Vol 669 ◽  
pp. 397-431 ◽  
Author(s):  
JAE HWA LEE ◽  
HYUNG JIN SUNG ◽  
PER-ÅGE KROGSTAD

Direct numerical simulation (DNS) of a spatially developing turbulent boundary layer (TBL) over a wall roughened with regularly arrayed cubes was performed to investigate the effects of three-dimensional (3-D) surface elements on the properties of the TBL. The cubes were staggered in the downstream direction and periodically arranged in the streamwise and spanwise directions with pitches of px/k = 8 and pz/k = 2, where px and pz are the streamwise and spanwise spacings of the cubes and k is the roughness height. The Reynolds number based on the momentum thickness was varied in the range Reθ = 300−1300, and the roughness height was k = 1.5θin, where θin is the momentum thickness at the inlet, which corresponds to k/δ = 0.052–0.174 from the inlet to the outlet; δ is the boundary layer thickness. The characteristics of the TBL over the 3-D cube-roughened wall were compared with the results from a DNS of the TBL over a two-dimensional (2-D) rod-roughened wall. The introduction of cube roughness affected the turbulent Reynolds stresses not only in the roughness sublayer but also in the outer layer. The present instantaneous flow field and linear stochastic estimations of the conditional averaging showed that the streaky structures in the near-wall region and the low-momentum regions and hairpin packets in the outer layer are dominant features in the TBLs over the 2-D and 3-D rough walls and that these features are significantly affected by the surface roughness throughout the entire boundary layer. In the outer layer, however, it was shown that the large-scale structures over the 2-D and 3-D roughened walls have similar characteristics, which indicates that the dimensional difference between the surfaces with 2-D and 3-D roughness has a negligible effect on the turbulence statistics and coherent structures of the TBLs.

2013 ◽  
Vol 668 ◽  
pp. 521-524
Author(s):  
Wei Guo Wu ◽  
Chang Gen Lu ◽  
Shi Feng Xue

Origins of coherent structures near wall of a turbulent boundary layer has been studied by direct numerical simulation (DNS). Forming mechanism of coherent structures agrees well with DNS results. A close relationship has been found between the evolutional characteristics and factors such as the magnitude and structural distribution of the wall local impulse, and the amount of energy and the length of loading time that the initial local impulse disturbance introduces into the wall region. Moreover, these parameters play key roles in the formation of coherent structures near wall of a turbulent boundary layer. So, the wall local impulse disturbance provides the origins for inducing the formation of coherent structures in wall region of a turbulent boundary layer.


2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 189-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xian Liang ◽  
Xinliang Li

AbstractIn this paper, direct numerical simulation (DNS) is presented for spatially evolving turbulent boundary layer over an isothermal flat-plate atMa∞= 2.25,5,6,8. WhenMa∞= 8, two cases with the ratio of wall-to-reference temperatureTω/T∞= 1.9 and 10.03 are considered respectively. The wall temperature approaches recovery temperatures for other cases. The characteristics of compressible turbulent boundary layer (CTBL) affected by freestream Mach number and wall temperature are investigated. It focuses on assessing compressibility effects and the validity of Morkovin's hypothesis through computing and analyzing the mean velocity profile, turbulent intensity, the strong Reynolds analogy (SRA) and possibility density function of dilatation term. The results show that, when the wall temperature approaches recovery temperature, the effects of Mach number on compressibility is insignificant. As a result, the compressibility effect is very weak and the Morkovin's hypothesis is still valid for Mach number even up to 8. However, when Mach number equal to 8, the wall temperature effect on the compressibility is sensitive. In this case, whenTω/T∞= 1.9, the Morkovin's hypothesis is not fully valid. The validity of classical SRA depends on wall temperature directly. A new modified SRA is proposed to eliminate such negative factor in near wall region. Finally the effects of Mach number and wall temperature on streaks are also studied.


1996 ◽  
Vol 322 ◽  
pp. 297-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy E. Alving ◽  
H. H. Fernholz

This paper describes the behaviour of a turbulent boundary layer on a smooth, axisymmetric body exposed to an adverse pressure gradient of sufficient strength to cause a short region of mean reverse flow ('separation’). The pressure distribution is tailored such that the boundary layer reattaches and then develops in a nominally zero pressure gradient. Hot-wire and pulsed-wire measurements are presented over the separated region and downstream of reattachment. The response of the turbulence quantities to separation and to reattachment is discussed, with emphasis on the relaxation behaviour after reattachment. Over the separation bubble, the response is characteristic of that seen by other workers: the Reynolds stresses in the inner region are reduced and stress peaks develop away from the wall. At reattachment, the skewness of the fluctuating wall shear stress vanishes, as it is known to do at separation. After reattachment, the outer-layer stresses decay towards levels typical of unperturbed boundary layers. But the inner-layer relaxation is unusual. As the viscous wall stress increases downstream of reattachment, the recovery does not start at the wall and travel outward via the formation of an ‘internal’ layer, the process observed in many other relaxing flows. In fact, the inner layer responds markedly more slowly than the outer layer, even though response times are shortest near the wall. It is concluded that the large-scale, outer structures in the turbulent boundary layer survive the separation process and interfere with the regeneration of Reynolds stresses in the inner region after reattachment. This behaviour continues for at least six bubble lengths (20 boundary-layer thicknesses) after reattachment and is believed to have profound implications for our understanding of the interaction between inner and outer layers in turbulent boundary layers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 877 ◽  
pp. 167-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng-Yuan Zuo ◽  
Antonio Memmolo ◽  
Guo-ping Huang ◽  
Sergio Pirozzoli

Direct numerical simulation of the Navier–Stokes equations is carried out to investigate the interaction of a conical shock wave with a turbulent boundary layer developing over a flat plate at free-stream Mach number $M_{\infty }=2.05$ and Reynolds number $Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D703}}\approx 630$, based on the upstream boundary layer momentum thickness. The shock is generated by a circular cone with half opening angle $\unicode[STIX]{x1D703}_{c}=25^{\circ }$. As found in experiments, the wall pressure exhibits a distinctive N-wave signature, with a sharp peak right past the precursor shock generated at the cone apex, followed by an extended zone with favourable pressure gradient, and terminated by the trailing shock associated with recompression in the wake of the cone. The boundary layer behaviour is strongly affected by the imposed pressure gradient. Streaks are suppressed in adverse pressure gradient (APG) zones, but re-form rapidly in downstream favourable pressure gradient (FPG) zones. Three-dimensional mean flow separation is only observed in the first APG region associated with the formation of a horseshoe vortex, whereas the second APG region features an incipient detachment state, with scattered spots of instantaneous reversed flow. As found in canonical geometrically two-dimensional wedge-generated shock–boundary layer interactions, different amplification of the turbulent stress components is observed through the interacting shock system, with approach to an isotropic state in APG regions, and to a two-component anisotropic state in FPG. The general adequacy of the Boussinesq hypothesis is found to predict the spatial organization of the turbulent shear stresses, although different eddy viscosities should be used for each component, as in tensor eddy-viscosity models, or in full Reynolds stress closures.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document