Effects of shear-thinning rheology on near-wall turbulent structures.

Autor: Arosemena, Arturo A., Andersson, Ronnie, Andersson, Helge I., Solsvik, Jannike
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Fluid Mechanics; 10/25/2021, Vol. 925, p1-32, 32p
Abstrakt: Turbulent channel flow simulation of a shear-thinning fluid is considered – see Arosemena et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 908, 2021, p. A43) – and compared with a Newtonian base case to reveal the effects of the shear-dependent rheology on the near-wall structures. Analyses of different flow statistics revealed that, for the shear-thinning fluid case, the streamwise vortices appear to grow in size, depart from the wall and present a lessening in their intensity. Information regarding variations in the quasi-longitudinal vortices is also obtained from three-dimensional structures identified through a normalized $Q$ -criterion. With shear-thinning rheology, it is shown that the structures are comprised of wall-attached and -detached families which are taller than for a Newtonian fluid. Also, for a given height, the structures appear to be longer, with approximately the same width and overall larger volume for the shear-thinning fluid case; albeit their fractal dimension remains the same when compared to the Newtonian base case. Moreover, it is observed that the number density of vortical structures decreases with shear-thinning fluid behaviour. These observations, in conjunction with the known changes to the longitudinal velocity structures which appear to be less streaky, more spanwise separated and thickened with shear-thinning rheology, strongly suggest that the near-wall self-sustaining process has been disrupted. As we move slightly away from the wall and with shear-thinning behaviour, the local increase in viscosity seems to lead to less energetic vortices whereas the streaks are provided with an additional source of energy due to fluctuations in viscosity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index