Quantifying polymer deformation in viscoelastic turbulence: the geometric decomposition and a Riemannian approach to scalar measures

ORAL

Abstract

We develop a new framework to quantify the fluctuating behaviour of the conformation tensor in viscoelastic turbulent flows. This framework addresses two shortcomings of the classical approach based on Reynolds decomposition: the fluctuating part of the conformation tensor is not guaranteed to be positive definite and it does not consistently represent polymer expansions and contractions about the mean. Our approach employs a geometric decomposition that yields a positive-definite fluctuating conformation tensor with a clear physical interpretation as a deformation to the mean conformation. We propose three scalar measures of this fluctuating conformation tensor, which respect the non-Euclidean Riemannian geometry of the manifold of positive-definite tensors: fluctuating polymer volume, geodesic distance from the mean, and an anisotropy measure. We use these scalar quantities to investigate drag-reduced viscoelastic turbulent channel flow. Our approach establishes a systematic method to study viscoelastic turbulence. It also uncovers interesting phenomena that are not apparent using traditional analysis tools, including a logarithmic decrease in anisotropy of the mean conformation tensor away from the wall and polymer fluctuations peaking beyond the buffer layer.

*This work has been partially funded by the following NSF grants: CBET-1652244, OCE-1633124, CBET-1511937.

Authors

  • Ismail Hameduddin

    • The Johns Hopkins University
  • Charles Meneveau

    • Johns Hopkins University
    • Johns Hopkins Univ
    • The Johns Hopkins University
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
    • Johns Hopkins University, US
  • Tamer Zaki

    • Johns Hopkins Univ
    • The Johns Hopkins University
    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Dennice Gayme

    • Johns Hopkins University
    • The Johns Hopkins University