4.7 Article

Revisiting the reattachment regime: a closer look at tandem cylinder flow at Re=10 000

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 953, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2022.960

Keywords

shear layer turbulence; vortex dynamics; vortex shedding

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This study investigates the tandem cylinder flow and focuses on the development of the gap shear layers, which has been largely ignored in previous research. The researchers discovered significant differences in the shear layers compared to a single cylinder, including early separation, stabilizing crossflow, delayed transition to turbulence, and minimal meandering. The occurrence of vortex pairing in the gap shear layers was also reported for the first time. The study also explores the interaction between the recirculating gap flow and the shear layers, finding that large-scale gap vortices influence turbulence transition and have consequences for the reattachment mechanism and downstream wake development.
Tandem cylinder flow comprises several different flow regimes. Within the reattachment regime, the development of the gap shear layers is of utmost importance to the flow, but has received little attention so far. Through direct numerical simulations at Re = 10(4), for a gap ratio of 3.0, we have discovered that the shear layers are significantly altered with respect to a single cylinder. These differences include early onset of separation, crossflow stabilising, delayed transition to turbulence and little meandering of the transition region. Vortex pairing in the gap shear layers is reported for the first time. The interaction between the recirculating gap flow and the shear layers was investigated. Asymmetrical, large-scale gap vortices influence the position of transition to turbulence through direct contact and through secondary flows. The occurrence of transition in the gap shear layers has consequences for both the reattachment mechanism and the development of the downstream cylinder wake. The reattachment points are unsteady with large amplitude fluctuations on a fine time scale. Reattachment is seen to be a combination of impingement and modification of the upstream shear layers, which causes a double shear layer in the downstream cylinder near-wake. Buffeting by and interaction with the gap shear layers likely cause transition to turbulence in the downstream cylinder boundary layer. This leads to significant changes in the wake topology, compared with a single-cylinder wake.

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