15th European Turbulence Conference 2015
August 25-28th, 2015, Delft, The Netherlands
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The maximum sustainable heat flux in stably stratified channel flows


Go-down etc15 Tracking Number 135

Presentation:
Session: Atmospheric turbulence 2
Room: Room C
Session start: 15:00 Tue 25 Aug 2015

Judith Donda   j.m.m.donda@tue.nl
Affifliation: Eindhoven University of Technology

Ivo Van Hooijdonk   i.g.s.v.hooijdonk@tue.nl
Affifliation: Eindhoven University of Technology

Arnold Moene   arnold.moene@wur.nl
Affifliation: Wageningen University

GertJan van Heijst   G.J.F.v.Heijst@tue.nl
Affifliation: Eindhoven University of Technology

Herman Clercx   H.J.H.Clercx@tue.nl
Affifliation: Eindhoven University of Technology

Bas van de Wiel   b.j.h.v.d.wiel@tue.nl
Affifliation: Eindhoven University of Technology


Topics: - Atmospheric turbulence

Abstract:

In analogy to the nocturnal atmospheric boundary layer a flux-driven, cooled channel flow is studied using Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS). Here, in particular, the mechanism behind the collapse of turbulence at large cooling rates is analyzed. In agreement with earlier studies, the flow laminarizes at large cooling rates. The mechanism for the cessation of turbulence is understood from a Maximum Sustainable Heat Flux hypothesis, which is here tested against simulations. In stratified flow the maximum heat flux that can be transported downward by turbulence at the onset of cooling is limited to a maximum, which, in turn, is limited by the initial momentum of the flow. If the heat extraction at the surface exceeds this maximum, near-surface stability will rapidly increase, which further hampers efficient vertical heat transport. This positive feedback eventually causes turbulence to be fully suppressed by the intensive density stratification. It is shown that the collapse in the DNS-simulations is successfully predicted by the MSHF-theory. Apart from formal analysis, also a simplified methodology is presented, which is more useful in practice for prediction of regime-transitions in atmospheric field observations.