4.7 Article

Insights into the growth rate of spatially evolving plane turbulent free-shear layers from 2D vortex-gas simulations

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4974516

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DRDO [RN/DRDO/4124]
  2. Intel [RN/INTEL/4288]

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Although the free-shear or mixing layer has been a subject of extensive research over nearly a century, there are certain fundamental issues that remain controversial. These include the influence of initial and downstream conditions on the flow, the effect of velocity ratio across the layer, and the nature of any possible coupling between small scale dynamics and the large scale evolution of layer thickness. In the spirit of the temporal vortex-gas simulations of Suryanarayanan et al. [Free turbulent shear layer in a point vortex gas as a problem in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics, Phys. Rev. E 89, 013009 (2014)], we revisit the simple 2D inviscid vortex-gas model with extensive computations and detailed analysis, in order to gain insights into some of the above issues. Simulations of the spatially evolving vortex-gas shear layer are carried out at different velocity ratios using a computational model based on the work of Basu et al. [Vortex sheet simulation of a plane canonical mixing layer, Comput. Fluids 21, 1-30 (1992) and Modelling plane mixing layers using vortex points and sheets, Appl. Math. Modell. 19, 66-75 (1995)], but with a crucial improvement that ensures conservation of global circulation. The simulations show that the conditions imposed at the origin of the free shear layer and at the exit to the computational domain can affect flow evolution in their respective downstream and upstream neighbourhoods, the latter being particularly strong in the single stream limit. In between these neighbourhoods at the ends is a regime of universal self-preserving growth rate given by a universal function of velocity ratio. The computed growth rates are generally located within the scatter of experimental data on plane mixing layers and closely agree with recent high Reynolds number experiments and 3D large eddy simulation studies. These findings support the view that observed free-shear layer growth can be largely explained by the 2D vortex dynamics of the quasi-2D large-scale structures known to be a characteristic of plane mixing layers. Published by AIP Publishing.

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