Author:
CALMET ISABELLE,MAGNAUDET JACQUES
Abstract
Statistical characteristics of turbulence in the near-surface region of a steady open-
channel flow are examined using new data obtained in a high-Reynolds-number
large-eddy simulation using a dynamic subgrid-scale model. These data, which correspond to a Reynolds number Re* = 1280 based on the total depth and shear velocity
at the bottom wall, are systematically compared with those found in available direct numerical simulations in which Re* is typically one order of magnitude smaller.
Emphasis is put on terms involved in the turbulent kinetic energy budget (dominated by dissipation and turbulent transport), and on the intercomponent transfer
process by which energy is exchanged between the normal velocity component and
the tangential ones. It is shown that the relative magnitude of the pressure–strain
correlations depends directly on the anisotropy of the turbulence near the bottom of
the surface-influenced layer, and that this anisotropy is a strongly decreasing function
of Re*. This comparison also reveals the Re*-scaling laws of some of the statistical
moments in the near-surface region, especially those involving vorticity fluctuations.
Velocity variances, length scales and one-dimensional spectra are then compared with
predictions of the rapid distortion theory elaborated by Hunt & Graham (1978) to
predict the effect of the sudden insertion of a flat surface on a shearless turbulence.
A very good agreement is found, both qualitatively and quantitatively, outside the
thin viscous sublayer attached to the surface. As the present high-Reynolds-number
statistics have been obtained after a significant number of turnover periods, this
agreement strongly suggests that the validity of the Hunt & Graham theory is not
restricted to short times after surface insertion.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
65 articles.
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