Anisotropy analysis of a non-equilibrium turbulent boundary layer
ORAL
Abstract
Direct numerical simulation data of a non-equilibrium turbulent boundary layer evolving under adverse and then favorable pressure gradients (IJHFF (2025), 116; JFM (2024), 997:A75.) is analyzed to determine the state of turbulence in various regions of the flow. This database allows us to study the upstream history effects, a phenomenon that challenges turbulence models. The fundamental state of turbulence anisotropy is investigated using barycentric maps. Three distinct streamwise positions with different upstream histories are chosen: a small-defect APG (H=1.60, Re\textsubscript{$\theta$}= 5335, Re\textsubscript{$\tau$}=1010), a large-defect APG (H=2.78, Re\textsubscript{$\theta$}=11727, Re\textsubscript{$\tau$}=850), and a small-defect FPG (H=1.60, Re\textsubscript{$\theta$}=12287, Re\textsubscript{$\tau$}=2156) with a long non-equilibrium APG history. Near the wall, the dominance of $u^2$ over $v^2$ and $w^2$ weakens as the mean velocity defect increases. Further from the wall, the trajectory on the map deviates significantly, shifting toward a state resembling axisymmetric contraction, where $u^2$ and $w^2$ dominate $v^2$ more strongly than in small defect TBLs. In the subsequent FPG region, while the near-wall turbulence responds to the local favorable pressure gradient and resembles the small-defect APG case, the outer layer retains a distinct "memory" of the upstream APG. The result provides clear evidence that the inner and outer layers respond to changing pressure gradients at different rates, a challenge for turbulence models.
*This work was supported by computational resources from the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking, PRACE, the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey, Calcul Québec, and the Digital Research Alliance of Canada, and by funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).
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Publication:Yesildag, M. A., Gungor, T. R., Gungor, A. G., & Maciel, Y. (2025). Spatial features of Reynolds-stress carrying structures in turbulent boundary layers with pressure gradient. International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow, 116, 109883.
Gungor, T. R., Gungor, A. G., & Maciel, Y. (2024). Turbulent boundary layer response to uniform changes of the pressure force contribution. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 997, A75.