Relation of Large-scale motions with inlet blowing perturbations in turbulent wall-bounded flows

ORAL

Abstract

Direct numerical simulations (DNS) were performed in a turbulent channel flow to demonstrate the role of upstream perturbations in controlling heat transfer downstream. Snapshot POD and 3D adaptive Gaussian filtering were used to separate energetic and spatially large-scale motions. These scales carry most of the Reynolds stresses and turbulent kinetic energy. It is shown that the blowing perturbations enhance wall heat transfer at 3D to 5D (where D is jet diameter) downstream of the jets; this is a direct consequence of the proliferation of coherent vortical structures. The large-scale motions which form horseshoe vortices create strong sweep events downstream of perturbations; thus, enhancing heat transfer by moving hot fluid from the wall to the outer flow.

*This research was funded by NSF-CBET-ONR:1512393: International Collaboration: The role of initial conditions on LSMs/VLSMs in turbulent boundary layers.

Presenters

  • Venkatesh Pulletikurthi

    • Purdue University
    • School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906, USA

Authors

  • Venkatesh Pulletikurthi

    • Purdue University
    • School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906, USA
  • Suranga I Dharmarathne

    • School of Engineering, University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46227, USA
  • Fazle Hussain

    • Texas Tech University
    • Texas Tech Univ
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 794909, USA
  • Luciano Castillo

    • School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906, USA