arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2401.11793 [physics.flu-dyn]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Aspect-ratio effect on the wake of a wall-mounted square cylinder immersed in a turbulent boundary layer

Gerardo Zampino, Marco Atzori, Elias Zea, Evelyn Otero, Ricardo Vinuesa

Published 2024-01-22Version 1

The wake topology developing behind a wall-mounted square cylinder in a turbulent boundary layer has been investigated using a high-resolution large-eddy simulation (LES). The boundary-layer thickness at the obstacle location is fixed, the Reynolds number based on the cylinder h and the incoming free-stream velocity $u_\infty$ is 10,000 while the aspect ratio (AR), defined as obstacle height divided by its width, ranges from 1 to 4. The Reynolds stresses, anisotropy-invariant maps (AIM) and the turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) budget are analyzed to investigate the influence of AR on the wake structures and on the turbulence production and transport. In particular, the transition from a dipole configuration for low AR to a quadrupole wake is extensively discussed and examined. The necessity of more data to express this critical AR as a function of the momentum-thickness-based Reynolds number $Re_{\theta}$ is thus highlighted. As an effect of the AR, the wake is deformed in both streamwise and spanwise directions. This contraction of the wake, attributed to the occurrence of the base vortices for the cases AR = 3 and 4, impacts the size of the positive production region that stretches from the roof and the flank of the obstacle to the wake core. The AIMs confirm the wake three-dimensionality and are used to describe the redistribution of the turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) along the three normal directions, in agreement with the literature [A. J. Simonsen and P. Krogstad, Phys. Fluids 17, 088103, (2005)]. The present analysis on the TKE budget displays a stronger turbulence production for the cases AR = 3 and 4, demonstrating the strong influence of the tip and base vortices in generating turbulence at the wall location behind the cylinder.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2002.00489 [physics.flu-dyn] (Published 2020-02-02)
Motion of finite-size spheres released in a turbulent boundary layer
arXiv:2209.15356 [physics.flu-dyn] (Published 2022-09-30)
Causality analysis of large-scale structures in the flow around a wall-mounted square cylinder
arXiv:2012.11263 [physics.flu-dyn] (Published 2020-12-21)
On the characteristics of the turbulent wake behind a wall-mounted square cylinder