4.7 Article

Voronoi analysis of vortex clustering in homogeneous isotropic turbulence

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0039850

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A new technique based on the Voronoi diagram is used to quantify the clustering of fine-scale dissipative vortices. It is found that velocity gradient events are more intense and intermittent with a higher number density of fine-scale vortices. Fine-scale vortex clusters accumulate among stronger vortices rather than accumulating all vortices in the flow.
Clustering of fine-scale dissipative vortices is quantified using a new technique based on the Voronoi diagram. We consider datasets of numerical simulations of decaying and forced homogeneous turbulence up to Re-lambda approximate to 400. Velocity gradient events are more intense and intermittent if fine-scale vortices have a higher number density. However, clustering is observed only if the vortices are thresholded according to their intensity. Therefore, a fine-scale vortex cluster is the accumulation among stronger vortices rather than the accumulation of all of the vortices in the flow. Turbulence statistics in intense vortex clusters share characteristics with those of the outside when they are renormalized by their local magnitude. This suggests that the clusters are the product of passive amplification of the swirling intensity by underlying larger-scale motions. Comparing the decaying and forced flows reveals that the large-scale forcing affects the vortex distribution although other turbulence statistics are unaffected. The rotation axes of the vortices in the cluster are not preferentially aligned for either flow, which implies that large-scale shear layers are not a vital feature of the clusters. Published under license by AIP Publishing.

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