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Partially Averaged Navier-Stokes Method for Turbulence: Fixed Point Analysis and Comparison With Unsteady Partially Averaged Navier-Stokes
148
Citations
10
References
2005
Year
Numerical AnalysisEngineeringFluid MechanicsTurbulenceDetached Eddy SimulationNavier-stokes EquationsUnsteady FlowAveraged Navier-stokes MethodPoint AnalysisNumerical SimulationModeling And SimulationLarge Eddy SimulationHydrodynamic StabilityNavier StokesIncompressible FlowTurbulence PhysicsExternal AerodynamicsModel Production-to-dissipation RatioAerospace EngineeringTurbulent Flow Heat TransferSubgrid ModelsHydrodynamicsTurbulence ModelingAerodynamicsMultiscale Hydrodynamics
Hybrid/bridging models that combine the advantages of Reynolds averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) method and large-eddy simulations are being increasingly used for simulating turbulent flows with large-scale unsteadiness. The objective is to obtain accurate estimates of important large-scale fluctuations at a reasonable cost. In order to be effective, these bridging methods must posses the correct “energetics”: that is, the right balance between production (P) and dissipation (ε). If the model production-to-dissipation ratio (P∕ε) is inconsistent with turbulence physics at that cutoff, the computations will be unsuccessful. In this paper, we perform fixed-point analyses of two bridging models—partially-averaged Navier Stokes (PANS) and unsteady RANS (URANS)—to examine the behavior of production-to-dissipation ratio. It is shown that the URANS-(P∕ε) ratio is too high rendering it incapable of resolving much of the fluctuations. On the other hand, the PANS-(P∕ε) ratio allows the model to vary smoothly from RANS to DNS depending upon the values of its resolution control parameters.
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