Measurement of nonlinear wave coupling and energy transfer in planarjet shear layer transition

Author(s):  
F. THOMAS ◽  
H. CHU
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Shen ◽  
Yu-Hang Shen ◽  
Jia-Qi Dong ◽  
Kai-Jun Zhao ◽  
Zhong-Bing Shi ◽  
...  

Abstract The fully developed turbulence can be regarded as a nonlinear system, with wave coupling inside, which causes the nonlinear energy transfer, and drives the turbulence to develop further or be suppressed. Spectral analysis is one of the most effective methods to study turbulence system. In order to apply it in the study of the nonlinear wave coupling process of edge plasma turbulence, an efficient algorithm based on spectral analysis technology was proposed to solve the nonlinear wave coupling equation. The algorithm is based on a mandatory temporal static condition after separating the nonideal spectra from the ideal spectra. The realization idea and programing flow were given. According to the characteristics of plasma turbulence, the simulation data were constructed and used to verify the algorithm and its implementation program. The simulation results and examples showed the accuracy of the algorithm and the corresponding program, which could play a great role in the study of the energy transfer in edge plasma turbulences. As an application, the energy cascade analysis of typical edge plasma turbulence was carried out using the results of a case calculation. Consequently, a physical image of the energy transfer in a kind of fully developed turbulence was constructed, which confirmed that the energy transfer in this turbulent system was from lower- to higher-frequency regions and from linear growing to damping waves.


2021 ◽  
Vol 918 (1) ◽  
pp. 26
Author(s):  
Jiuqi Ma ◽  
Xinliang Gao ◽  
Zhongwei Yang ◽  
Bruce T. Tsurutani ◽  
Mingzhe Liu ◽  
...  

In this problem a mean turbulent shear layer originally exists, homogeneous in the streamwise direction, formed perhaps by previous instabilities, but in equilibrium with the fine-grained turbulence. At a given time, a large eddy of a fixed horizontal wavenumber is initiated. We study the subsequent time development of the non-equilibrium interactions between the three components of flow as they adjust towards ultimate simultaneous equilibrium, using the integrated energy-balance conservation equations to derive the amplitude equations. This necessarily involves the usual averaging procedure and a conditional or phase-averaging procedure by which the large structure motion is educed from the total fluctuations. In general, the mean flow growth is due to the energy transfer to both fluctuating components, the large eddy gains energy from the mean motion and exchanges energy with the fine-grained turbulence, while the fine-grained turbulence gains energy from the mean flow and exchanges with the large eddy and converts its energy to heat through viscous dissipation of the smallest scales. The closure problem is obtained via the shape assumptions which enter into the interaction integrals. The situation in which the fine-grained turbulent kinetic energy production and viscous dissipation are in local balance is considered, the displacement from equilibrium being due only to the energy transfer from the large eddy. The large eddy shape is taken to be two-dimensional, instability-wavelike, with its vorticity axis perpendicular to the direction of the mean outer stream. Prior to averaging, detailed but approximate calculations of the wave-induced turbulent Reynolds stresses are obtained; the product of these stresses with the appropriate large-eddy rates of strain give the energy transfer mechanism between the two disparate scales of fluctuations. Coupled, nonlinear amplitude or energy density equations for the three components of motion are obtained, the coefficients of which are the interaction integrals guided by the shape assumptions. It is found that for the special case of parallel flow, the energy of the large eddy first undergoes a hydrodynamic-instability type of amplification but eventually decays due to the energy transfer to the fine-grained turbulence, while the turbulent kinetic energy is displaced from an original level of equilibrium to a new one because of the ability of the large eddy to negotiate an indirect energy transfer from the mean flow. For the growing shear layer, approximate considerations show that if the mechanism of energy transfer from the large to the small scale is eventually weakened by the shear layer growth compared to the large-eddy production mechanism so that the amplification and decay process repeats, ‘bursts’ of the remnant of the same large eddy will occur repeatedly until an ultimate equilibrium is reached among the three interacting components of motion. However, for the large eddy whose wavenumber corresponds to that of the initially most amplified case, the ‘bursting’ phenomenon is much less pronounced and equilibrium is very nearly reached at the end of the very first ‘burst’.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaoqun Liu ◽  
Ping Lu ◽  
Lin Chen ◽  
Yonghua Yan

This paper is a short review of our recent DNS work on physics of late boundary layer transition and turbulence. Based on our DNS observation, we propose a new theory on boundary layer transition, which has five steps, that is, receptivity, linear instability, large vortex structure formation, small length scale generation, loss of symmetry and randomization to turbulence. For turbulence generation and sustenance, the classical theory, described with Richardson's energy cascade and Kolmogorov length scale, is not observed by our DNS. We proposed a new theory on turbulence generation that all small length scales are generated by “shear layer instability” through multiple level ejections and sweeps and consequent multiple level positive and negative spikes, but not by “vortex breakdown.” We believe “shear layer instability” is the “mother of turbulence.” The energy transferring from large vortices to small vortices is carried out by multiple level sweeps, but does not follow Kolmogorov's theory that large vortices pass energy to small ones through vortex stretch and breakdown. The loss of symmetry starts from the second level ring cycle in the middle of the flow field and spreads to the bottom of the boundary layer and then the whole flow field.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linge Zang ◽  
Shinsuke Ohshima ◽  
Yufan Qu ◽  
Peiwan Shi ◽  
Wulyu Zhong ◽  
...  

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