{"title":"Laminar-to-Turbulent Transition of Pipe Flows Triggered by Wall-Mounted, Ring-Type Obstacles","authors":"F. Durst, M. Breuer, B. Ünsal, K. Haddad","doi":"10.1080/14685248.2022.2092121","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The literature stresses the inherent stability of laminar pipe flows with parabolic velocity profiles and this paper refers to the relevant publications summarizing this work. To cause such flows to turn into their turbulent state requires laminar pipe flows to be triggered externally. Ring-type, wall-mounted obstacles can be used for this purpose, and investigations in this area are of particular interest to the authors’ work, summarized in this paper. In the investigations presented here, however, a special triggering technique was employed that allowed laminar pipe flows to be exposed to obstacle disturbances for only about 30 ms. Individual puffs and slugs could be produced in this way. Comparisons with fixed wall-mounted obstacles showed that the properties of both types of turbulent slugs were the same. Theoretical derivations are described to provide the required obstacle height as a function of the Reynolds number, to trigger fully developed laminar pipe flows to turn into their turbulent state. Corresponding experimental investigations were also performed as described. Very good agreement between the theoretical and experimental results was obtained. All this demonstrates that a relatively simple ‘ad hoc theory’ can derive the required height of ring-type, wall-inserted obstacles to trigger laminar pipe flows with parabolic velocity profiles to turn turbulent. Other ways to trigger laminar pipe flows to turn turbulent were also investigated by employing blowers and plenum chambers and varying the lengths and diameters of pipes. It is demonstrated, in a somewhat qualitative way, that the maintenance of laminar pipe flows requires all components of a test rig to be matched to each other to maintain pipe flows laminar.","PeriodicalId":49967,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Turbulence","volume":"23 1","pages":"382 - 404"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Turbulence","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14685248.2022.2092121","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MECHANICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The literature stresses the inherent stability of laminar pipe flows with parabolic velocity profiles and this paper refers to the relevant publications summarizing this work. To cause such flows to turn into their turbulent state requires laminar pipe flows to be triggered externally. Ring-type, wall-mounted obstacles can be used for this purpose, and investigations in this area are of particular interest to the authors’ work, summarized in this paper. In the investigations presented here, however, a special triggering technique was employed that allowed laminar pipe flows to be exposed to obstacle disturbances for only about 30 ms. Individual puffs and slugs could be produced in this way. Comparisons with fixed wall-mounted obstacles showed that the properties of both types of turbulent slugs were the same. Theoretical derivations are described to provide the required obstacle height as a function of the Reynolds number, to trigger fully developed laminar pipe flows to turn into their turbulent state. Corresponding experimental investigations were also performed as described. Very good agreement between the theoretical and experimental results was obtained. All this demonstrates that a relatively simple ‘ad hoc theory’ can derive the required height of ring-type, wall-inserted obstacles to trigger laminar pipe flows with parabolic velocity profiles to turn turbulent. Other ways to trigger laminar pipe flows to turn turbulent were also investigated by employing blowers and plenum chambers and varying the lengths and diameters of pipes. It is demonstrated, in a somewhat qualitative way, that the maintenance of laminar pipe flows requires all components of a test rig to be matched to each other to maintain pipe flows laminar.
期刊介绍:
Turbulence is a physical phenomenon occurring in most fluid flows, and is a major research topic at the cutting edge of science and technology. Journal of Turbulence ( JoT) is a digital forum for disseminating new theoretical, numerical and experimental knowledge aimed at understanding, predicting and controlling fluid turbulence.
JoT provides a common venue for communicating advances of fundamental and applied character across the many disciplines in which turbulence plays a vital role. Examples include turbulence arising in engineering fluid dynamics (aerodynamics and hydrodynamics, particulate and multi-phase flows, acoustics, hydraulics, combustion, aeroelasticity, transitional flows, turbo-machinery, heat transfer), geophysical fluid dynamics (environmental flows, oceanography, meteorology), in physics (magnetohydrodynamics and fusion, astrophysics, cryogenic and quantum fluids), and mathematics (turbulence from PDE’s, model systems). The multimedia capabilities offered by this electronic journal (including free colour images and video movies), provide a unique opportunity for disseminating turbulence research in visually impressive ways.