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Large-scale modes of turbulent channel flow: transport and structure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 November 2001

Z. LIU
Affiliation:
Laboratory for Turbulence and Complex Flow, Department of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
R. J. ADRIAN
Affiliation:
Laboratory for Turbulence and Complex Flow, Department of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
T. J. HANRATTY
Affiliation:
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA

Abstract

Turbulent flow in a rectangular channel is investigated to determine the scale and pattern of the eddies that contribute most to the total turbulent kinetic energy and the Reynolds shear stress. Instantaneous, two-dimensional particle image velocimeter measurements in the streamwise-wall-normal plane at Reynolds numbers Reh = 5378 and 29 935 are used to form two-point spatial correlation functions, from which the proper orthogonal modes are determined. Large-scale motions – having length scales of the order of the channel width and represented by a small set of low-order eigenmodes – contain a large fraction of the kinetic energy of the streamwise velocity component and a small fraction of the kinetic energy of the wall-normal velocities. Surprisingly, the set of large-scale modes that contains half of the total turbulent kinetic energy in the channel, also contains two-thirds to three-quarters of the total Reynolds shear stress in the outer region. Thus, it is the large-scale motions, rather than the main turbulent motions, that dominate turbulent transport in all parts of the channel except the buffer layer. Samples of the large-scale structures associated with the dominant eigenfunctions are found by projecting individual realizations onto the dominant modes. In the streamwise wall-normal plane their patterns often consist of an inclined region of second quadrant vectors separated from an upstream region of fourth quadrant vectors by a stagnation point/shear layer. The inclined Q4/shear layer/Q2 region of the largest motions extends beyond the centreline of the channel and lies under a region of fluid that rotates about the spanwise direction. This pattern is very similar to the signature of a hairpin vortex. Reynolds number similarity of the large structures is demonstrated, approximately, by comparing the two-dimensional correlation coefficients and the eigenvalues of the different modes at the two Reynolds numbers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press

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