Abstract
Direct numerical solutions of the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations have been
obtained under the Boussinesq approximation for the temporal evolution of a turbulent
jet-like flow subjected to off-source volumetric heating, of the kind that occurs in
a cloud due to latent heat release on condensation of water vapour. The results show
good qualitative agreement with available experimental data on spatially growing jets.
Thus, heating accelerates the flow and arrests jet growth; and turbulence velocities
increase with heating but not as rapidly as mean velocities, so normalized intensities
drop. It is shown that the baroclinic torque resulting from the heating enhances the
vorticity dramatically in all three directions, with a preferential amplification at the
higher wavenumbers that results in a rich fine structure at later times in the evolution
of the jet. Streamwise vortex pairs, rendered stronger by mean flow acceleration, appear
to be responsible for large expulsive motions at certain transverse cross-sections
in the ambient fluid near the heated flow; together with the disruption of the toroidal
component of the coherent vorticity achieved by heating, this results in an entraining
velocity field that is qualitatively different from that around unheated turbulent jets.
This mechanism may provide a plausible explanation for the experimentally observed
drop in entrainment with off-source heating.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
51 articles.
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