Andrea Cimarelli, Gabriele Boga, Anna Pavan, Pedro Costa, Enrico Stalio
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Energy Cascade Phenomena in Temporal Boundary Layers
The geometrically complex mechanisms of energy transfer in the compound space of scales and positions of wall turbulent flows are investigated in a temporally evolving boundary layer. The phenomena consist of spatially ascending reverse and forward cascades from the small production scales of the buffer layer to the small dissipative scales distributed among the entire boundary layer height. The observed qualitative behaviour conforms with previous results in turbulent channel flow, thus suggesting that the observed phenomenology is a robust statistical feature of wall turbulence in general. An interesting feature is the behaviour of energy transfer at the turbulent/non-turbulent interface, where forward energy cascade is found to be almost absent. In particular, the turbulent core is found to sustain a variety of large-scale wall-parallel motions at the turbulent interface through weak but persistent reverse energy cascades. This behaviour conforms with previous results in free shear flows, thus suggesting that the observed phenomenology is a robust statistical feature of turbulent shear flows featuring turbulent/non-turbulent interfaces in general.
期刊介绍:
Flow, Turbulence and Combustion provides a global forum for the publication of original and innovative research results that contribute to the solution of fundamental and applied problems encountered in single-phase, multi-phase and reacting flows, in both idealized and real systems. The scope of coverage encompasses topics in fluid dynamics, scalar transport, multi-physics interactions and flow control. From time to time the journal publishes Special or Theme Issues featuring invited articles.
Contributions may report research that falls within the broad spectrum of analytical, computational and experimental methods. This includes research conducted in academia, industry and a variety of environmental and geophysical sectors. Turbulence, transition and associated phenomena are expected to play a significant role in the majority of studies reported, although non-turbulent flows, typical of those in micro-devices, would be regarded as falling within the scope covered. The emphasis is on originality, timeliness, quality and thematic fit, as exemplified by the title of the journal and the qualifications described above. Relevance to real-world problems and industrial applications are regarded as strengths.