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Lumley Decomposition of the Turbulent Round Jet Far-field. Part 2 -- Dynamics

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 Added by Azur Hodzic
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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In the current work the reconstruction of the far-field region of the turbulent axi-symmetric jet is performed in order to investigate the modal turbulence kinetic energy production contributions. The reconstruction of the field statistics is based on a semi-analytical Lumley Decomposition (LD) of the PIV sampled field using stretched amplitude decaying Fourier modes (SADFM), derived in Hodv{z}ic et al. 2019, along the streamwise coordinate. It is shown that, a wide range of modes obtain a significant amount of energy directly from the mean flow, and are therefore not exclusively dependent on a Richardson-like energy cascade even in the $kappa$-range in which the energy spectra exhibit the $-5/3$-slope. It is observed that the $-7/3$-range in the cross-spectra is fully reconstructed using a single mode in regions of high mean shear, and that shear-stresses are nearly fully reconstructed using the first two modes. These results indicate that most of the energy production related to shear-stresses is related to the first LD mode.



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The current work presents a tensor formulation of the Lumley Decomposition (LD), introduced in its original form by Lumley (1967b), allowing decompositions of turbulent flow fields in curvilinear coordinates. The LD in his form is shown to enable semi-analytical decompositions of self-similar turbulent flows in general coordinate systems. The decomposition is applied to the far-field region of the fully developed turbulent axi-symmetric jet, which is expressed in stretched spherical coordinates in order to exploit the self-similar nature of the flow while ensuring the self-adjointness of the LD integral. From the LD integral it is deduced that the optimal eigenfunctions in the streamwise direction are stretched amplitude-decaying Fourier modes (SADFM). The SADFM are obtained from the LD integral upon the introduction of a streamwise-decaying weight function in the vector space definition. The wavelength of the Fourier modes is linearly increasing in the streamwise direction with an amplitude which decays with the -3/2 power of distance from the virtual origin. The streamwise evolution of the SADFM re-sembles reversed wave shoaling known from surface waves. The energy- and cross-spectra obtained from these SADFM exhibit a -5/3- and a -7/3-slope region, respectively, as would be expected for regular Fourier modes in homogeneous and constant shear flows. The approach introduced in this work can be extended to other flows which admit to equilibrium similarity, such that a Fourier-based decomposition along inhomogeneous flow directions can be performed.
The proliferation of turbulence in subcritical wall-bounded shear flows involves spatially localised coherent structures. Turbulent spots correspond to finite-time nonlinear responses to pointwise disturbances and are regarded as seeds of turbulence during transition. The rapid spatial decay of the turbulent fluctuations away from a spot is accompanied by large-scale flows with a robust structuration. The far field velocity field of these spots is investigated numerically using spectral methods in large domains in four different flow scenarios (plane Couette, plane Poiseuille, Couette-Poiseuille and a sinusoidal shear flow). At odds with former expectations, the planar components of the velocity field decay algebraically. These decay exponents depend only on the symmetries of the system, which here depend on the presence of an applied gradient, and not on the Reynolds number. This suggests an effective two-dimensional multipolar expansion for the far field, dominated by a quadrupolar flow component or, for asymmetric flow fields, by a dipolar flow component.
The similarity of the two-point correlation tensor along the streamwise direction in the axi-symmetric jet far-field is analyzed, herein its utility in spectral theory. A separable two-point correlation coefficient has been the basis for the argument that the energy-optimized basis functions along the streamwise direction are Fourier modes (from the approach of equilibrium similarity theory). This would naturally be highly desirable both from a computational and an analytical perspective. The present work, however, shows that the two-point correlation tensor multiplied by the Jacobian is not displacement invariant even in logarithmically stretched coordinates. This result directly impacts the motivation for a Fourier-based representation of the correlation function in spectral space in relation to the Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) of the field. It is demonstrated that a displacement invariant form of the kernel is impossible to achieve using the suggested coordinate transformations from earlier works. This inability is shown to be related to the fundamental differences between the turbulent flow at hand and the ideal case of homogeneous turbulence.
An extension of Proper Orthogonal Decomposition is applied to the wall layer of a turbulent channel flow (Re {tau} = 590), so that empirical eigenfunctions are defined in both space and time. Due to the statistical symmetries of the flow, the igenfunctions are associated with individual wavenumbers and frequencies. Self-similarity of the dominant eigenfunctions, consistent with wall-attached structures transferring energy into the core region, is established. The most energetic modes are characterized by a fundamental time scale in the range 200-300 viscous wall units. The full spatio-temporal decomposition provides a natural measure of the convection velocity of structures, with a characteristic value of 12 u {tau} in the wall layer. Finally, we show that the energy budget can be split into specific contributions for each mode, which provides a closed-form expression for nonlinear effects.
A Lagrangian experimental study of an axisymmetric turbulent water jet is performed to investigate the highly anisotropic and inhomogeneous flow field. The measurements were conducted within a Lagrangian exploration module, an icosahedron apparatus, to facilitate optical access of three cameras. The stereoscopic particle tracking velocimetry results in three component tracks of position, velocity and acceleration of the tracer particles within the vertically-oriented jet with a Taylor-based Reynolds number $mathcal R_lambda simeq 230$. Analysis is performed at seven locations from 15 diameters up to 45 diameters downstream. Eulerian analysis is first carried out to obtain critical parameters of the jet and relevant scales, namely the Kolmogorov and large turnover (integral) scales as well as the energy dissipation rate. Lagrangian statistical analysis is then performed on velocity components stationarised following methods inspired by Batchelor (textit{J. Fluid Mech.}, vol. 3, 1957, pp. 67-80) which aim to extend stationary Lagrangian theory of turbulent diffusion by Taylor to the case of self-similar flows. The evolution of typical Lagrangian scaling parameters as a function of the developing jet is explored and results show validation of the proposed stationarisation. The universal scaling constant $C_0$ (for the Lagrangian second-order structure function), as well as Eulerian and Lagrangian integral time scales are discussed in this context. $C_0$ is found to converge to a constant value (of the order of $C_0 = 3$) within 30 diameters downstream of the nozzle. Finally, the existence of finite particle size effects are investigated through consideration of acceleration dependent quantities.
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