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Effect of streamwise-periodic wall transpiration on turbulent friction drag

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2007

M. QUADRIO
Affiliation:
Department of Aerospace Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
J. M. FLORYAN
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, University of Western Ontario, Ontario, Canada
P. LUCHINI
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Università di Salerno, Italy

Abstract

In this paper a turbulent plane channel flow modified by a distributed transpiration at the wall, with zero net mass flux, is studied through direct numerical simulation (DNS) using the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations. The transpiration is steady, uniform in the spanwise direction, and varies sinusoidally along the streamwise coordinate. The transpiration wavelength is found to dramatically affect the turbulent flow, and in particular the frictional drag. Long wavelengths produce large drag increases even with relatively small transpiration intensities, thus providing an efficient means for improved turbulent mixing. Shorter wavelengths, on the other hand, yield an unexpected decrease of turbulent friction. These opposite effects are separated by a threshold of transpiration wavelength, shown to scale in viscous units, related to a longitudinal length scale typical of the near-wall turbulence cycle. Transpiration is shown to affect the flow via two distinct mechanisms: steady streaming and direct interaction with turbulence. They modify the turbulent friction in two opposite ways, with streaming being equivalent to an additional pressure gradient needed to drive the same flow rate (drag increase) and direct interaction causing reduced turbulent activity owing to the injection of fluctuationless fluid. The latter effect overwhelms the former at small wavelengths, and results in a (small) net drag reduction. The possibility of observing large-scale streamwise-oriented vortical structures as a consequence of a centrifugal instability mechanism is also discussed. Our results do not demonstrate the presence of such vortices, and the same conclusion can be arrived at through a stability analysis of the mean velocity profile, even though it is possible that a higher value of the Reynolds number is needed to observe the vortices.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007

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