1 / 23

Dissipation element analysis of turbulence

Dissipation element analysis of turbulence. Lipo Wang, Norbert Peters Institut für Technische Verbrennung RWTH-Aachen Germany TMBW-07 21.08.2007 Trieste, Italy. Content. Content Introduction The concept of dissipation element PDF of the length scale of dissipation elements

Download Presentation

Dissipation element analysis of turbulence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dissipation element analysis of turbulence Lipo Wang, Norbert Peters Institut für Technische Verbrennung RWTH-Aachen Germany TMBW-07 21.08.2007 Trieste, Italy

  2. Content • Content • Introduction • The concept of dissipation element • PDF of the length scale of dissipation elements • Joint PDF of the length scale and scalar difference • Modelling • Conditional moments • Relation of the joint PDF to Intermittency • Summary

  3. Introduction • Previous geometrical studies of turbulence • Vortex tubes (Townsend, 1952, She et al., 1990) • -not space-filling • Critical points (Gibson, 1968; Perry and Chong, 1987; Vassilicos, 2003) • -analysis only in the vicinity of those points • The objective of dissipation element analysis is to decompose the entire field into small units to better understand turbulence.

  4. Construction of dissipation element by gradient trajectories Starting from each material point in a flow field in ascending directions along scalar gradients, each trajectory will inevitably reach the maximal and minimal points. The ensemble of material points sharing the same pair ending points is named a dissipation element. This decomposition is space-filling and non-arbitrary.

  5. Introduction of dissipation element For illustration: Dissipation elements in 2D turbulence

  6. 3D-DNS calculation Various simulations of homogenous shear flow in a 2 cubic box Here we focus only on the passive scalar field.

  7. Interaction with vortex tubes Interaction between dissipation elements and vortex tubes

  8. Parametric description Among the many parameters to describe the statistical properties of dissipation elements, we have chosen l and ∆’, which are defined as the straight line connecting the two extremal points and the scalar difference at these points, respectively.

  9. The joint PDF The typical joint PDF from DNS

  10. Results: conditional mean The compensated conditional mean from DNS joint PDF

  11. A model for the length scale PDF Fast (jump) processes: 1. The Poisson process of random cutting of a line into small segments. This gives an exponential distribution. 2. Add a reconnection mechanism by molecular diffusion. This removes the small elements Slow process (drift term) 3. Continuous change of length by connection and diffusion of end points. This enforces the .

  12. The PDF of length scale • There are four terms describing fast processes • GC: Generation (of small elements) by Cutting • GR: Generation (of large elements)by Reconnection • RC: Removal (of large elements)by Cutting • RR: Removal (of small elements)by Reconnection • and one drift term in the evolution equation. ( L.Wang and N.Peters, JFM (2006), vol.554, pp.457-475)

  13. The PDF of length scale The PDF of length scale: comparison of model with DNS

  14. Model of the joint PDF • The joint PDF contains the foremost information for the modeling of scalar mixing in turbulence: • the marginal PDF of the length of elements • all conditional moments <∆’n|l> and its scaling exponents • Then there is a need to go further and model the joint PDF. • Once an element is cut or reconnected, the ∆’ of the new element(s) will be forced to change. Therefore the fast processes changing the length of an element will determine the change of ∆’. PDF decomposition:

  15. A compensation-defect model For scalar difference, there is a compensation in the cutting process and defect in the reconnection process, respectively.

  16. Model of the joint PDF The resulting joint PDF equation and c are modeling constants.

  17. Model of the joint PDF K=1, C=1.5

  18. Results: anomalous scaling exponents

  19. Results: conditional means Conditional first moment with different defect factor c

  20. Results: the marginal PDF of  The marginal PDF of ∆’

  21. Intermittency in the conventional representation The occurence of strong events during the cascade process makes turbulent flows inhomogeneous and intermittent. Therefore the PDFs at different scales are not self-similar.

  22. Intermittency in the context of the joint PDF At large scales, the conditional PDF is Gaussian around the conditional mean. At small scales, the conditional PDF is skewed toward large scalar difference, which implies the occurrence cliff structure (large and ).

  23. Summary 1. A given (diffusive) scalar field can be decomposed into dissipation elements, which are space-filling and non-arbitrary. 2. The length scale PDF from the cutting-reconnection model agrees well with the results from DNS. 3. By setting appropriate parameters in the joint PDF equation, also a fair agreement with DNS is obtained. 4. The conditional moments from the joint PDF reproduce the inertial range scaling exponents. 5. Intermittency and cliff structure in scalar fields can be related with and explained from the joint PDF.

More Related