Surface Fluctuations and Air Entrainment in a Turbulent Free-Surface Boundary Layer
ORAL
Abstract
Air entrainment due to turbulence in a free surface boundary layer flow created by a horizontally moving vertical surface-piercing wall is studied through experiments and Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS). In the experiments, the moving wall is created by a stainless steel belt loop that is driven by two vertical rollers; one length of the belt between the rollers acts as the moving wall. The belt is accelerated suddenly from rest until reaching constant speed, thus creating a temporally-evolving boundary layer. Experimental observations and measurements of air-water interface deformation patterns and bubbles were performed with time-resolved photographic techniques. In the DNS, a temporally evolving boundary layer problem was studied with the computational domain consisting of a streamwise section of the belt flow field with periodic boundary conditions. The simulation uses a single-fluid, two-phase (air and water) formulation with an exact projection method on a staggered grid to resolve the air-water interface. From the DNS results, the physics and prevalence of several classes of air entrainment events is assessed.
*The support of the Office of Naval Research under grant N000141712081, program manager Dr. T. Fu, is gratefully acknowledged.
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Presenters
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Martin A. Erinin
- Univ of Maryland-College Park