Back to Search
Start Over
Turbulent flows over porous lattices: alteration of near-wall turbulence and pore-flow amplitude modulation
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Turbulent flows over porous lattices consisting of rectangular cuboid pores are investigated using scale-resolving direct numerical simulations. Beyond a certain threshold which is primarily determined by the wall-normal Darcy permeability, Ky, near-wall turbulence transitions from its canonical regime, marked by the presence of streak-like structures, to another marked by the presence of Kelvin-Helmholtz-like (K-H-like) spanwise-coherent structures. The threshold agrees well with that previously established in studies where permeable-wall boundary conditions had been used as surrogates for a porous substrate. In the smooth-wall-like regime, none of the investigated substrates demonstrate any reduction in drag relative to a smooth-wall flow. At the permeable surface, a notable component of the flow is that which adheres to the pore geometry and undergoes modulation by the turbulent scales of motions due to the interaction mechanism described by Abderrahaman-Elena et al. (2019). Its resulting effect can be quantified in terms of an amplitude modulation (AM) using the approach of Mathis et al. (2009). This pore-coherent flow component persists throughout the porous substrate, highlighting the importance of a given substrate's microstructure in the presence of an overlying turbulent flow. This geometry-related aspect of the flow is not accounted for when continuum-based models for a porous medium or effective representations of them such as wall boundary conditions are used. The intensity of the AM effect is enhanced in the K-H-like regime and becomes strengthened with larger permeability. As a result, structured porous materials may be designed to exploit or mitigate these flow features depending upon the intended application.<br />QC 20240327
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1428120341
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1017.jfm.2024.198