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Introduction to turbulence and turbulence modeling

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Vortical structures. Large range of scales. 3 dimensional. High Reynolds number V*L/n ... Currently limited: simple geometry, low Re, fundamental research ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to turbulence and turbulence modeling


1
Introduction to turbulence and turbulence modeling
Henry Chang University of Texas, Austin
2
Outline
  • Turbulence phenomenon
  • Levels of modeling
  • Computer simulation methods

3
Turbulence Phenomenon
  • Regimes of fluid flow
  • Turbulent flows are ubiquitous
  • Characteristics of turbulence
  • Chaotic (seemingly random) fluctuations
  • Vortical structures
  • Large range of scales
  • 3 dimensional
  • High Reynolds number VL/n
  • High dissipation and mixing

4
Levels of modeling
  • Particle physics
  • Quantum mechanics
  • Molecular dynamics
  • Continuum mechanics
  • Navier Stokes equations

5
Computer Simulation
  • Discretize domain in space and time
  • Solve Navier Stokes equations numerically
  • 3 methods for turbulence
  • Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS)
  • Large Eddy Simulation (LES)
  • Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS)

6
Direct Numerical Simulation
  • Simulate all scales of turbulence
  • Largest scale L
  • Smallest scale h, known as Kolmogorov scale
  • L/h O(Re3/4)
  • Computation time O(Re3)
  • Currently limited simple geometry, low Re,
    fundamental research

7
Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes
  • Reynolds decomposition u(x,t) u(x) u'(x,t)
  • Solution u contains no turbulent fluctuations
  • Closure problem depends on
  • Reynolds stress must be modeled
    averaged effect of fluctuations of all time
    scales
  • Well-suited for steady flow engineering problems

8
Large Eddy Simulation
  • Simulate only the large scale fluctuations model
    the small scales
  • Large scales defined through filter G
  • Example Top-hat filter
  • G(x-x') 1/D if x-x' lt D/2 (zero
    otherwise)
  • D is filter width, often equal to cell width

9
Large Eddy Simulation
  • Filter Navier Stokes equation
  • Subgrid stress tensor
    modeled averaged effect of all subgrid scale
    fluctuations
  • Unsteady flows, possibly more general classes of
    problems and geometries

10
Errors in simulations
  • Continuous space/time domain approximated by
    finite number of spatial points and time steps
  • Differential or integral equations approximated
    by numerical schemes
  • Continuous range of fluctuation scales
    approximated by finite number of scales (not
    applicable to RANS)
  • Closure modeling for small scale fluctuations
    (not applicable to DNS)

11
References
  • Pierre Sagaut, Large Eddy Simulation for
    Incompressible Flows, 2nd ed., Springer, 2002.
  • Robert Moser, TAM 538 Turbulence Fall 2004,
    Illini Union Bookstore.
  • Stephen Pope, Ten questions concerning the
    large-eddy simulation of turbulent flows, New
    Journal of Physics 6 (2004) 35.
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