Drag Reduction by Culture Solutions of Dry Malted Rice

Author(s):  
Keizo Watanabe ◽  
Satoshi Ogata

Turbulent drag reduction by culture solutions of dry malted rice was investigated in a 2.00mm-inner-diameter pipe flow of length 50 diameters at Reynolds numbers from 500 to 8000. The drag reducing abilities of the solutions were tested by comparing drag reduction effectiveness at different concentrations and culture times in water. Comparisons between polysaccharide biopolymer solutions and culture solutions of dry malted rice revealed that the test solutions exhibited Type B drag reduction, which were roughly parallel to, but displaced upwards from, the Newtonian Prandtl-Ka´rma´n law. The maximum drag reduction ration was about 30% at a Reynolds number of 8,000. It is shown also that the onset point of drag reduction phenomena was Ref = 200.

2019 ◽  
Vol 874 ◽  
pp. 699-719 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose M. Lopez ◽  
George H. Choueiri ◽  
Björn Hof

Polymer additives can substantially reduce the drag of turbulent flows and the upper limit, the so-called state of ‘maximum drag reduction’ (MDR), is to a good approximation independent of the type of polymer and solvent used. Until recently, the consensus was that, in this limit, flows are in a marginal state where only a minimal level of turbulence activity persists. Observations in direct numerical simulations at low Reynolds numbers ($Re$) using minimal sized channels appeared to support this view and reported long ‘hibernation’ periods where turbulence is marginalized. In simulations of pipe flow at $Re$ near transition we find that, indeed, with increasing Weissenberg number ($Wi$), turbulence expresses long periods of hibernation if the domain size is small. However, with increasing pipe length, the temporal hibernation continuously alters to spatio-temporal intermittency and here the flow consists of turbulent puffs surrounded by laminar flow. Moreover, upon an increase in $Wi$, the flow fully relaminarizes, in agreement with recent experiments. At even larger $Wi$, a different instability is encountered causing a drag increase towards MDR. Our findings hence link earlier minimal flow unit simulations with recent experiments and confirm that the addition of polymers initially suppresses Newtonian turbulence and leads to a reverse transition. The MDR state on the other hand results at these low$Re$ from a separate instability and the underlying dynamics corresponds to the recently proposed state of elasto-inertial turbulence.


2008 ◽  
Vol 602 ◽  
pp. 209-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. J. GILLISSEN ◽  
B. J. BOERSMA ◽  
P. H. MORTENSEN ◽  
H. I. ANDERSSON

We use direct numerical simulation to study turbulent drag reduction by rigid polymer additives, referred to as fibres. The simulations agree with experimental data from the literature in terms of friction factor dependence on Reynolds number and fibre concentration. An expression for drag reduction is derived by adopting the concept of the elastic layer.


1988 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 441-443
Author(s):  
HIROTSUGU HATTORI ◽  
TOMOO YAMAUCHI ◽  
SEIICHI TANABE ◽  
HIDEOMI MATSUDA

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