Experimental study of the fine-scale structure of conserved scalar mixing in turbulent shear flows. Part 2. Sc≈1

1998 ◽  
Vol 364 ◽  
pp. 1-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
KENNETH A. BUCH ◽  
WERNER J. A. DAHM

Results are presented from an experimental study into the fine-scale structure of generic, Sc≈1, dynamically passive, conserved scalar fields in turbulent shear flows. The investigation was based on highly resolved, two-dimensional imaging of laser Rayleigh scattering, with measurements obtained in the self-similar far field of an axisymmetric coflowing turbulent jet of propane issuing into air at local outer-scale Reynolds numbers Reδ≡uδ/v of 11000 and 14000. The resolution and signal quality of these measurements allowed direct differentiation of the scalar field data ζ(x, t) to determine the instantaneous scalar energy dissipation rate field (Re Sc)−1∇ζ·∇ζ(x, t). Results show that, as for large-Sc scalars (Buch & Dahm 1996), the scalar dissipation rate field consists entirely of strained, laminar, sheet-like diffusion layers, despite the fact that at Sc≈1 the scale on which these layers are folded by vorticity gradients is comparable to the layer thickness. Good agreement is found between the measured internal structure of these layers and the self-similar local solution of the scalar transport equation for a spatially uniform but time-varying strain field. The self-similar distribution of dissipation layer thicknesses shows that the ratio of maximum to minimum thicknesses is only 3 at these conditions. The local dissipation layer thickness is related to the local outer scale as λD/δ ≡ΛRe−3/4δSc−1/2, with the average thickness found to be 〈Λ〉=11.2, with both the largest and smallest layer thicknesses following Kolmogorov Re−3/4δ) scaling.

1996 ◽  
Vol 317 ◽  
pp. 21-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth A. Buch ◽  
Werner J. A. Dahm

We present results from an experimental investigation into the fine-scale structure associated with the mixing of a dynamically passive conserved scalar quantity on the inner scales of turbulent shear flows. The present study was based on highly resolved two- and three-dimensional spatio-temporal imaging measurements. For the conditions studied, the Schmidt number (Sc ≡ v/D) was approximately 2000 and the local outerscale Reynolds number (Reσ≡ uσ/v) ranged from 2000 to 10000. The resolution and signal quality allow direct differentiation of the measured scalar field ζ(x, t) to give the instantaneous scalar energy dissipation rate field (Re Sc)−1 ∇ζċ∇ζ(x, t). The results show that the fine-scale structure of the scalar dissipation field, when viewed on the inner-flow scales for Sc ≡ 1, consists entirely of thin strained laminar sheet-like diffusion layers. The internal structure of these scalar dissipation sheets agrees with the one-dimensional self-similar solution for the local strain–diffusion competition in the presence of a spatially uniform but time-varying strain rate field. This similarity solution also shows that line-like structures in the scalar dissipation field decay exponentially in time, while in the vorticity field both line-like and sheet-like structures can be sustained. This sheet-like structure produces a high level of intermittency in the scalar dissipation field – at these conditions approximately 4% of the flow volume accounts for nearly 25% of the total mixing achieved. The scalar gradient vector field ∇ζ(x, t) for large Sc is found to be nearly isotropic, with a weak tendency for the dissipation sheets to align with the principal axes of the mean flow strain rate tensor. Joint probability densities of the conserved scalar and scalar dissipation rate have a shape consistent with this canonical layer-like fine-scale structure. Statistics of the conserved scalar and scalar dissipation rate fields are found to demonstrate similarity on inner-scale variables even at the relatively low Reynolds numbers investigated.


1998 ◽  
Vol 377 ◽  
pp. 169-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
RICHARD D. FREDERIKSEN ◽  
WERNER J. A. DAHM ◽  
DAVID R. DOWLING

Experimental results are presented for the influence of Reynolds number on multifractal scale similarity in turbulent flows. These are obtained from single-point measurements of a dynamically passive Sc≈1 conserved scalar quantity ζ(t) in a turbulent shear flow at outer-scale Reynolds numbers of 14000[les ]Reδ[les ]110000. Statistical criteria based on the maximum allowable scale-to-scale variation L1(ε) in multiplier distributions P(Mε) from multifractal gauge sets allow accurate discrimination between multifractal and non-multifractal scaling. Results show that the surrogate scalar energy dissipation rate χs(t)≡(dζ/dt)2is found to display a scale-invariant similarity consistent with a random multiplicative cascade characterized by a bilinear multiplier distribution P(Mε) over a range of scales extending downward from the outer scaleTδ. For a range of scales extending upward from the inner (diffusive) scale TD, the dissipation rate displays a different scale-invariant similarity characterized by a uniform multiplier distribution. The former scale-invariance becomes evident in the present Sc≈1 data only when Reδ is sufficiently large. Comparisons with results from Sc 1 data indicate that this scale-invariant similarity applies when the outer-to-inner scale ratio Tδ/TD≈0.09 Re3/4δSc1/2 is greater than about 400. In contrast to the scalar dissipation rate field, the scalar field is found to lack any multifractal scale similarity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. 109843 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beawer Barwari ◽  
Sebastian Burgmann ◽  
Artur Bechtold ◽  
Martin Rohde ◽  
Uwe Janoske

Author(s):  
Benedikt Krohn ◽  
Sunming Qin ◽  
Victor Petrov ◽  
Annalisa Manera

Turbulent free jets attracted the focus of many scientists within the past century regarding the understanding of mass- and momentum transport in the turbulent shear field, especially in the near-field and the self-similar region. Recent investigations attempt to understand the intermediate fields, called the mixing transition or ‘the route to self-similarity’. An apparent gap is recognized in light of this mixing transition, with two main conjectures being put forth. Firstly the flow will always asymptotically reach a fully self-similar state if boundary conditions permit. The second proposes partial and local self-similarity within the mixing transition. We address the later with an experimental investigation of the intermediate field turbulence dynamics in a non-confined free jet with a nozzle diameter of 12.7 mm and an outer scale Reynolds number of 15,000. High speed Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) is used to record the velocity fields with a final spatial resolution of 194 × 194 μm2. The analysis focuses on higher order moments and two-point correlations of velocity variances in space and time. We observed local self-similarity in the measured correlation fields. Coherent structures are present within the near-field where the turbulent energy spectrum cascades along a dissipative slope. Towards the transition region, the spectrum smoothly transforms to a viscous cascade, as it is commonly observed in the self-similar region.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (12) ◽  
pp. 12736-12741
Author(s):  
Yan-huan Jiang ◽  
Guo-xiu Li ◽  
Hong-meng Li ◽  
Guo-peng Zhang ◽  
Jia-cheng Lv

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