Abstract
A study of the Lagrangian statistical properties of velocity and passive scalar fields
using direct numerical simulations is presented, for the case of stationary isotropic
turbulence with uniform mean scalar gradients. Data at higher grid resolutions (up
to 5123 and Taylor-scale Reynolds number 234) allow an update of previous velocity
results at lower Reynolds number, including intermittency and dimensionality effects
on vorticity time scales. The emphasis is on Lagrangian scalar time series which are
new to the literature and important for stochastic mixing models. The variance of
the ‘total’ Lagrangian scalar value (ϕ˜+, combining contributions from both mean
and fluctuations) grows with time, with the velocity–scalar cross-correlation function
and fluid particle displacements playing major roles. The Lagrangian increment of
ϕ˜+ conditioned upon velocity and scalar fluctuations is well represented by a linear
regression model whose parameters depend on both Reynolds number and Schmidt
number. The Lagrangian scalar fluctuation is non-Markovian and has a longer time
scale than the velocity, which is due to the strong role of advective transport, and
is in contrast to results in an Eulerian frame where the scalars have shorter time
scales. The scalar dissipation is highly intermittent and becomes de-correlated in
time more rapidly than the energy dissipation. Differential diffusion for scalars with
Schmidt numbers between 1/8 and 1 is characterized by asymmetry in the two-scalar
cross-correlation function, a shorter time scale for the difference between two scalars,
as well as a systematic decrease in the Lagrangian coherency spectrum up to at
least the Kolmogorov frequency. These observations are consistent with recent work
suggesting that differential diffusion remains important in the small scales at high
Reynolds number.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
108 articles.
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