TY - JOUR
T1 - On the effects of dilute polymers on driven cavity turbulent flows
AU - Liberzon, Alex
N1 - Funding Information: This work is supported in part by the Israel Science Foundation under Grant 782/08 and the Wolfson Family Charitable Fund. The author wishes to thank the Turbulence Structure Laboratory team for the assistance with the experiments. The author is thankful for the anonymous referees for the very constructive remarks regarding the similarity of the presented results with previously published experiments and simulations.
PY - 2011/12
Y1 - 2011/12
N2 - Effects of dilute polymer solutions on a lid-driven cubical cavity turbulent flow are studied via particle image velocimetry (PIV). This canonical flow is a combination of a bounded shear flow, driven at constant velocity and vortices that change their spatial distribution as a function of the lid velocity. From the two-dimensional PIV data we estimate the time averaged spatial fields of key turbulent quantities. We evaluate a component of the vorticity-velocity correlation, namely 〈ω3v〉, which shows much weaker correlation, along with the reduced correlation of the fluctuating velocity components, u and v. There are two contributions to the reduced turbulent kinetic energy production -〈u v〉Suv, namely the reduced Reynolds stresses, -〈u v〉, and strongly modified pointwise correlation of the Reynolds stress and the mean rate-of-strain field, Suv. The Reynolds stresses are shown to be affected because of the derivatives of the Reynolds stresses, ∂〈u v〉/∂y that are strongly reduced in the same regions as the vorticity-velocity correlation. The results, combined with the existing evidence, support the phenomenological model of polymer effects propagating from the polymer scale to the velocity derivatives and through the mixed-type correlations and Reynolds stress derivatives up to the turbulent velocity fields. The effects are shown to be qualitatively similar in different flows regardless of forcing type, homogeneity or presence of liquid-solid boundaries.
AB - Effects of dilute polymer solutions on a lid-driven cubical cavity turbulent flow are studied via particle image velocimetry (PIV). This canonical flow is a combination of a bounded shear flow, driven at constant velocity and vortices that change their spatial distribution as a function of the lid velocity. From the two-dimensional PIV data we estimate the time averaged spatial fields of key turbulent quantities. We evaluate a component of the vorticity-velocity correlation, namely 〈ω3v〉, which shows much weaker correlation, along with the reduced correlation of the fluctuating velocity components, u and v. There are two contributions to the reduced turbulent kinetic energy production -〈u v〉Suv, namely the reduced Reynolds stresses, -〈u v〉, and strongly modified pointwise correlation of the Reynolds stress and the mean rate-of-strain field, Suv. The Reynolds stresses are shown to be affected because of the derivatives of the Reynolds stresses, ∂〈u v〉/∂y that are strongly reduced in the same regions as the vorticity-velocity correlation. The results, combined with the existing evidence, support the phenomenological model of polymer effects propagating from the polymer scale to the velocity derivatives and through the mixed-type correlations and Reynolds stress derivatives up to the turbulent velocity fields. The effects are shown to be qualitatively similar in different flows regardless of forcing type, homogeneity or presence of liquid-solid boundaries.
KW - Dilute polymer
KW - Lid-driven cavity
KW - Turbulent flow
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=82655172364&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijheatfluidflow.2011.08.005
DO - 10.1016/j.ijheatfluidflow.2011.08.005
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0142-727X
VL - 32
SP - 1129
EP - 1137
JO - International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow
JF - International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow
IS - 6
ER -