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Intermittency of coherent structures in the core region of fully developed turbulent pipe flow
90
Citations
15
References
1976
Year
Flow ControlEngineeringFluid MechanicsTurbulenceViolent Reynolds StressTurbulent Pipe FlowBoundary LayerUnsteady FlowFluid PropertiesCore RegionHydrodynamic StabilityPipe FlowFlow PhysicReynolds StressTurbulent Flow Heat TransferCivil EngineeringTurbulence ModelingHydrodynamicsAerodynamicsCoherent Structures
The present investigation is oriented towards a better understanding of the turbulent structure in the core region of fully developed and completely wall-bounded flows. In view of the already existing results concerning the bursting process in boundary layers (which are semi-bounded flows), an amplitude analysis of the Reynolds shear stress fluctuation u 1 u 2 , sorted into four quadrants of the u 1 , u 2 plane, was carried out in a turbulent pipe flow. For the wall side of the core region, in which the correlation coefficient u 1 u 2 / u ’ 1 u ’ 2 does not change appreciably with the distance from the wall, the structure of the Reynolds stress is found to be similar to that obtained in boundary layers: bursts, i.e. ejections of low speed fluid, make the dominant contribution to the Reynolds stress; the regions of violent Reynolds stress are small fractions of the overall flow; and the mean time interval between bursts is found to be almost constant across the flow. For the core region, the large cross-stream evolution of the correlation coefficient u 1 u 2 / u ’ 1 u ’ 2 is associated with a new structure of the Reynolds stress induced by the completely wall-bounded nature of the flow. Very large amplitudes of u 1 u 2 are still observed, but two distinct burst-like patterns are now identified and related to ejections originating from the two opposite halves of the flow. In addition to this interaction, a focusing effect caused by the circular section of the pipe is observed. As a result of these two effects, the mean time interval between the bursts decreases significantly in the core region and reaches a minimum on the pipe axis. Investigation of specific space-time velocity correlations reveals the possible existence of rotating structures similar to those observed at the outer edge of turbulent boundary layers. These coherent motions are found to have a scale noticeably larger than that of the bursts.
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