4.4 Article

Influence of Surface Anisotropy on Turbulent Flow Over Irregular Roughness

Journal

FLOW TURBULENCE AND COMBUSTION
Volume 104, Issue 2-3, Pages 331-354

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10494-019-00074-4

Keywords

Wall-bounded turbulence; Roughness; Surface anisotropy

Funding

  1. United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/P004687/1, EP/P009875/1, EP/L000261/1]
  2. EPSRC [EP/L000261/1, EP/R029326/1, EP/P004687/1, EP/P009875/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The influence of surface anisotropy upon the near-wall region of a rough-wall turbulent channel flow is investigated using direct numerical simulation (DNS). A set of nine irregular rough surfaces with fixed mean peak-to-valley height, near-Gaussian height distributions and specified streamwise and spanwise correlation lengths were synthesised using a surface generation algorithm. By defining the surface anisotropy ratio (SAR) as the ratio of the streamwise and spanwise correlation lengths of the surface, we demonstrate that surfaces with a strong spanwise anisotropy (SAR < 1) can induce an over 200% increase in the roughness function Delta U+, compared to their streamwise anisotropic (SAR > 1) equivalent. Furthermore, we find that the relationship between the roughness function Delta U+ and the SAR parameter approximately follows an exponentially decaying function. The statistical response of the near-wall flow is studied using a double-averaging methodology in order to distinguish form-induced dispersive stresses from their turbulent counterparts. Outer-layer similarity is recovered for the mean velocity defect profile as well as the Reynolds stresses. The dispersive stresses all attain their maxima within the roughness canopy. Only the streamwise dispersive stress reaches levels that are comparable to the equivalent Reynolds stress, with surfaces of high SAR attaining the highest levels of streamwise dispersive stress. The Reynolds stress anisotropy also shows distinct differences between cases with strong streamwise anisotropy that stay close to an axisymmetric, rod-like state for all wall-normal locations, compared to cases with spanwise anisotropy where an axisymmetric, disk-like state of the Reynolds stress anisotropy tensor is observed around the roughness mean plane. Overall, the results from this study underline that the drag penalty incurred by a rough surface is strongly influenced by the surface topography and highlight its impact upon the mean momentum deficit in the outer flow as well as the Reynolds and dispersive stresses within the roughness layer.

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