화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol.118, 1098-1114, 2018
Large eddy simulation of a transitional, thermal Blasius flow at low Reynolds number
Large eddy simulation (LES) of a transitional, thermal Blasius flowfield at a sufficiently low Reynolds number along an isothermal, flat plate is presented herein. Prior experiments observed that boundary layer transition is induced by the presence of streamwise vortex instability caused by the complex interaction between thermal buoyancy and forced convection dynamics. The maximum Grashof and Reynolds numbers employed in the LES were approximately 1.05 x 10(11) and 1.18 x 10(5), respectively. To further enhance the accuracy, computational efficiency, and numerical stability, the LES solved the low-Mach number compressible flow governing equations, which included fluctuating density effects and pressure-density decoupling. For the subgrid scale (SGS) closure, a locally dynamic Smagorinsky SGS model was implemented into the LES solver to enable the backscatter phenomenon intrinsic to transitional boundary layer flows. The LES accurately predicted the onset of streamwise vortex instability and the eventual three-dimensional vortex breakdown of the underlying mean flow into a fully developed turbulent boundary layer, when compared to previously measured data. In the developed turbulence region, quadrant analyses indicated Q2 and Q4 events dominated the contribution to the Reynolds shear stress in the near-wall region, whereas Q1 and Q3 events contributed considerably to the wall-normal turbulent heat flux. And, as a result of the instability within the conduction layer, the layer erupts and intermittently releases buoyant thermal plumes. These recurring intermittent events inside the conduction layer deflect and deform the flowfield quantities near the wall, resulting in a plurality of peculiar peaks and shear layers inside the boundary layer. Furthermore, these buoyant thermal plumes are the dominant turbulence production mechanism farther away from the wall in the downstream region of the developed turbulent boundary layer flow. Near the wall, however, forced convection turbulent flow effects were observed, in which the shear production term was the primary contributor to the generation of turbulent kinetic energy, and quasi-streamwise and horseshoe-like vortex structures were observed in the developed turbulence region. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.