scholarly journals Erratum: Energy Transfer from Large to Small Scales in Turbulence by Multiscale Nonlinear Strain and Vorticity Interactions [Phys. Rev. Lett. 124 , 104501 (2020)]

2021 ◽  
Vol 126 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Perry L. Johnson
2017 ◽  
Vol 813 ◽  
pp. 1156-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Pouransari ◽  
H. Kolla ◽  
J. H. Chen ◽  
A. Mani

In this study we consider particle-laden turbulent flows with significant heat transfer between the two phases due to sustained heating of the particle phase. The sustained heat source can be due to particle heating via an external radiation source as in the particle-based solar receivers or an exothermic reaction in the particles. Our objective is to investigate the effects of fluid heating by a dispersed phase on the turbulence evolution. An important feature in such settings is the preferential clustering phenomenon which is responsible for non-uniform distribution of particles in the fluid medium. Particularly, when the ratio of particle inertial relaxation time to the turbulence time scale, namely the Stokes number, is of order unity, particle clustering is maximized, leading to thin regions of heat source similar to the flames in turbulent combustion. However, unlike turbulent combustion, a particle-laden system involves a wide range of clustering scales that is mainly controlled by particle Stokes number. To study these effects, we considered a decaying homogeneous isotropic turbulence laden with heated particles over a wide range of Stokes numbers. Using a low-Mach-number formulation for the fluid energy equation and a Lagrangian framework for particle tracking, we performed numerical simulations of this coupled system. We then applied a high-fidelity framework to perform spectral analysis of kinetic energy in a variable-density fluid. Our results indicate that particle heating can considerably influence the turbulence cascade. We show that the pressure-dilatation term introduces turbulent kinetic energy at a range of scales consistent with the scales observed in particle clusters. This energy is then transferred to high wavenumbers via the energy transfer term. For low and moderate levels of particle heating intensity, quantified by a parameter $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ defined as the ratio of eddy time to mean temperature increase time, turbulence modification occurs primarily in the dilatational modes of the velocity field. However, as the heating intensity is increased, the energy transfer term converts energy from dilatational modes to divergence-free modes. Interestingly, as the heating intensity is increased, the net modification of turbulence by heating is observed dominantly in divergence-free modes; the portion of turbulence modification in dilatational modes diminishes with higher heating. Moreover, we show that modification of divergence-free modes is more pronounced at intermediate Stokes numbers corresponding to the maximum particle clustering. We also present the influence of heating intensity on the energy transfer term itself. This term crosses over from negative to positive values beyond a threshold wavenumber, showing the cascade of energy from large scales to small scales. The threshold is shown to shift to higher wavenumbers with increasing heating, indicating a growth in the total energy transfer from large scales to small scales. The fundamental energy transfer analysis presented in this paper provides insightful guidelines for subgrid-scale modelling and large-eddy simulation of heated particle-laden turbulence.


Author(s):  
M. Velli ◽  
F. Pucci ◽  
F. Rappazzo ◽  
A. Tenerani

Coronal heating is at the origin of the EUV and X-ray emission and mass loss from the sun and many other stars. While different scenarios have been proposed to explain the heating of magnetically confined and open regions of the corona, they must all rely on the transfer, storage and dissipation of the abundant energy present in photospheric motions, which, coupled to magnetic fields, give rise to the complex phenomenology seen at the chromosphere and transition region (i.e. spicules, jets, ‘tornadoes’). Here we discuss models and numerical simulations which rely on magnetic fields and electric currents both for energy transfer and for storage in the corona. We will revisit the sources and frequency spectrum of kinetic and electromagnetic energies, the role of boundary conditions, and the routes to small scales required for effective dissipation. Because reconnection in current sheets has been, and still is, one of the most important processes for coronal heating, we will also discuss recent aspects concerning the triggering of reconnection instabilities and the transition to fast reconnection.


2018 ◽  
Vol 841 ◽  
pp. 581-613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianchun Wang ◽  
Minping Wan ◽  
Song Chen ◽  
Shiyi Chen

Kinetic energy transfer in compressible isotropic turbulence is studied using numerical simulations with solenoidal forcing at turbulent Mach numbers ranging from 0.4 to 1.0 and at a Taylor Reynolds number of approximately 250. The pressure dilatation plays an important role in the local conversion between kinetic energy and internal energy, but its net contribution to the average kinetic energy transfer is negligibly small, due to the cancellation between compression and expansion work. The right tail of probability density function (PDF) of the subgrid-scale (SGS) flux of kinetic energy is found to be longer at higher turbulent Mach numbers. With an increase of the turbulent Mach number, compression motions enhance the positive SGS flux, and expansion motions enhance the negative SGS flux. Average of SGS flux conditioned on the filtered velocity divergence is studied by numerical analysis and a heuristic model. The conditional average of SGS flux is shown to be proportional to the square of filtered velocity divergence in strong compression regions for turbulent Mach numbers from 0.6 to 1.0. Moreover, the antiparallel alignment between the large-scale strain and the SGS stress is observed in strong compression regions. The inter-scale transfer of solenoidal and compressible components of kinetic energy is investigated by Helmholtz decomposition. The SGS flux of solenoidal kinetic energy is insensitive to the change of turbulent Mach number, while the SGS flux of compressible kinetic energy increases drastically as the turbulent Mach number becomes larger. The compressible mode persistently absorbs energy from the solenoidal mode through nonlinear advection. The kinetic energy of the compressible mode is transferred from large scales to small scales through the compressible SGS flux, and is dissipated by viscosity at small scales.


Author(s):  
Amilcare Porporato ◽  
Milad Hooshyar ◽  
Andrew D. Bragg ◽  
Gabriel Katul

Turbulent flows are out-of-equilibrium because the energy supply at large scales and its dissipation by viscosity at small scales create a net transfer of energy among all scales. This energy cascade is modelled by approximating the spectral energy balance with a nonlinear Fokker–Planck equation consistent with accepted phenomenological theories of turbulence. The steady-state contributions of the drift and diffusion in the corresponding Langevin equation, combined with the killing term associated with the dissipation, induce a stochastic energy transfer across wavenumbers. The fluctuation theorem is shown to describe the scale-wise statistics of forward and backward energy transfer and their connection to irreversibility and entropy production. The ensuing turbulence entropy is used to formulate an extended turbulence thermodynamics.


Author(s):  
R.D. Leapman ◽  
P. Rez ◽  
D.F. Mayers

Microanalysis by EELS has been developing rapidly and though the general form of the spectrum is now understood there is a need to put the technique on a more quantitative basis (1,2). Certain aspects important for microanalysis include: (i) accurate determination of the partial cross sections, σx(α,ΔE) for core excitation when scattering lies inside collection angle a and energy range ΔE above the edge, (ii) behavior of the background intensity due to excitation of less strongly bound electrons, necessary for extrapolation beneath the signal of interest, (iii) departures from the simple hydrogenic K-edge seen in L and M losses, effecting σx and complicating microanalysis. Such problems might be approached empirically but here we describe how computation can elucidate the spectrum shape.The inelastic cross section differential with respect to energy transfer E and momentum transfer q for electrons of energy E0 and velocity v can be written as


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