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11:15
15 mins
CHARACTERISTIC DISTRIBUTION AND SCALE INTERACTION OF TURBULENCE IN A BOUNDARY LAYER
Patrick Bechlars, Richard D. Sandberg
Session: Wall-bounded flows 3
Session starts: Wednesday 26 August, 10:30
Presentation starts: 11:15
Room: Room I
Patrick Bechlars ()
Richard D. Sandberg ()
Abstract:
This work revisits the concept of turbulent boundary layers from a novel perspective on scale transfer. Turbulence production
and dissipation together with the energy budgets are analyzed in the velocity gradient invariant phase space. In combination with
filtering, the mechanism of scale coupling is investigated and illustrated for different characteristic flow topologies. The understanding
of the scale coupling is important to model turbulence. Turbulence models describe the complex interaction of the scales of motion
in a simplified form. The essential task of turbulence modeling is to capture the coupling of the modeled and unmodeled scales as
well as the evolution of the modeled scales within the unmodeled flow. This work characterizes the scale coupling by focusing on the
interfaces between modeled and unmodeled flow such as production and dissipation. The mechanisms that govern the evolution of the
modeled quantities are investigated for their core properties and universal features. Direct numerical simulation (DNS) is carried out
to obtain data of a compressible zero pressure-gradient flat plate turbulent boundary layer flow. This flow topology allows to unveil the
effect of a wall on the coupling of scales and evolution of turbulence.