4.7 Article

The state space and travelling-wave solutions in two-scale wall-bounded turbulence

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 947, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2022.686

Keywords

turbulent boundary layers

Funding

  1. European Office of Aerospace Research and Development (EOARD) [FA9550-19-1-7021]
  2. Leverhulme Trust [RPG-2019-123]
  3. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/T009365/1]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of China [11802322]

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The computation of invariant solutions and the visualization of the associated state space are important for understanding the transition and self-sustaining process in wall-bounded shear flows. However, in multi-scale turbulence, the lack of scale interaction processes captured by invariant solutions prevents finding a solution that resembles turbulent state. Nevertheless, there is one solution that captures the two-scale energetics and scale interaction process of turbulence.
The computation of invariant solutions and the visualisation of the associated state space have played a key role in the understanding of transition and the self-sustaining process in wall-bounded shear flows. In this study, an extension of this approach is sought for a turbulent flow which explicitly exhibits multi-scale behaviour. The minimal unit of multi-scale near-wall turbulence, which resolves two adjacent spanwise integral length scales of motion, is considered using a shear stress-driven flow model (Doohan, Willis & Hwang J. Fluid Mech., vol. 913, 2021, A8). The edge state, 26 travelling waves and two periodic orbits are computed, which represent either the large- or small-scale self-sustaining processes. Given that the spanwise length scales are not widely separated here, it could be envisaged that turbulent trajectories visit these solutions in the state space. Considering the intra- and inter-scale dynamics of the flow, numerous phase portraits are examined, but the turbulent state is not found to approach any of these solutions. A detailed analysis reveals that this is due to the lack of scale interaction processes captured by the invariant solutions, including the mean-fluctuation interaction, the energy cascade in the streamwise wavenumber space and the cascade-driven energy production discovered recently. There is a single solution that resembles turbulence much more than the others, which captures two-scale energetics and a scale interaction process involving energy feeding from small to large spanwise scales through the subharmonic sinuous streak instability mode. Based on these observations, it is conjectured that the state space view of turbulent trajectories wandering between solutions would need suitable refinement to model multi-scale turbulence, when each solution does not represent multi-scale processes of turbulence. In particular, invariant solutions that are inherently multi-scale would be required.

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