Helical instability in pulsatile and oscillatory pipe flows
ORAL
Abstract
Pulsatile pipe flows in the presence of geometric distortions (e.g. bent, constriction) have recently been show to exhibit a nonlinear instability consisting of helical vortices [1]. The instability appears during the deceleration phase, breaks down into turbulence, and eventually returns to the laminar state when the flow accelerates. We track the instability in Reynolds number-Womersley number parameter space, and towards purely oscillatory flows, i.e. flows without mean component. We find that intermediate values of pulsation amplitude 1~<A~<1000 have a stabilizing effect, i.e. the instability threshold Reδ increases with increasing A. Else Reδ remains nearly constant. Here, Reδ is the Reynolds number based on Stokes layer thickness and A=Uo/Um; Uo and Um are oscillatory and mean components of the flow speed, respectively. Increasing Womersley number (i.e. pulsation frequency) on the other hand the instability threshold moves to lower Reδ. Moreover, we find that streamwise location of the instability in the pipe shifts towards the distortion site (bent section in our case) with increasing Womersley number.
[1] Xu, D., Varshney, A., Ma, X., Song, B., Riedl, M., Avila, M., and Hof, B., Nonlinear hydrodynamic instability and turbulence in pulsatile flow, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A 117, 11233 (2020).
*This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Austrian Science Fund in the framework of the research unit FOR 2688 Instabilities, Bifurcations and Migration in Pulsatile Flows, Grants AV 120/6-1 and I4188-N30.
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Publication: Xu, D., Varshney, A., Ma, X., Song, B., Riedl, M., Avila, M., and Hof, B., Nonlinear hydrodynamic instability and turbulence in pulsatile flow, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A 117, 11233 (2020).
Presenters
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Atul Varshney
- Institute of Science and Technology Aust