Direct and large-eddy simulations (DNS/LES) are performed to analyze the vortex dynamics and the statistics of bifurcating jets. The Reynolds number ranges from Re-D=1.5x10(3) to Re-D=5.0x10(4). An active control of the inlet conditions of a spatially evolving round jet is performed with the aim of favoring the jet spreading in one particular spatial direction, thus creating a bifurcating jet. Three different types of forcing, based on the information provided by a LES of a natural (unforced) jet, are superimposed to the jet inlet in order to cause its bifurcation. The different forcing types mimic the forcing methods used in experimental bifurcating jets (Lee and Reynolds, Parekh , Suzuki ), but using excitations with relatively low amplitudes, which could be used in real industrial applications. The three-dimensional coherent structures resulting from each specific forcing are analyzed in detail and their impact on the statistical behavior of bifurcating jets is explained. In particular we focus on the influence of the forcing frequency and of the Reynolds number on the jet control efficiency. Analysis of the coherent vortex dynamics shows that an inlet excitation which combines an axisymmetric excitation at the preferred frequency and a so-called flapping excitation at the subharmonic frequency is the most efficient strategy for jet control, even at high Reynolds numbers. (C) 2002 American Institute of Physics.
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