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Compressibility effects in a turbulent annular mixing layer. Part 1. Turbulence and growth rate

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TLDR
In this article, the authors used numerical simulations of time evolving annular mixing layers, which correspond to the early development of round jets, to study compressibility effects on turbulence in free shear flows.
Abstract
This work uses direct numerical simulations of time evolving annular mixing layers, which correspond to the early development of round jets, to study compressibility effects on turbulence in free shear flows. Nine cases were considered with convective Mach numbers ranging from Mc = 0.1 to 1.8 and turbulence Mach numbers reaching as high as Mt = 0.8.Growth rates of the simulated mixing layers are suppressed with increasing Mach number as observed experimentally. Also in accord with experiments, the mean velocity difference across the layer is found to be inadequate for scaling most turbulence statistics. An alternative scaling based on the mean velocity difference across a typical large eddy, whose dimension is determined by two-point spatial correlations, is proposed and validated. Analysis of the budget of the streamwise component of Reynolds stress shows how the new scaling is linked to the observed growth rate suppression. Dilatational contributions to the budget of turbulent kinetic energy are found to increase rapidly with Mach number, but remain small even at Mc = 1.8 despite the fact that shocklets are found at high Mach numbers. Flow visualizations show that at low Mach numbers the mixing region is dominated by large azimuthally correlated rollers whereas at high Mach numbers the flow is dominated by small streamwise oriented structures. An acoustic timescale limitation for supersonically deforming eddies is found to be consistent with the observations and scalings and is offered as a possible explanation for the decrease in transverse lengthscale.

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Citations
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A study of compressibility effects in the high-speed turbulent shear layer using direct simulation

TL;DR: In this paper, a wave equation for pressure analysis of the turbulent shear layer is performed for subsonic to supersonic Mach numbers and it is found that the normalized pressure-strain term decreases with increasing Mach number, which leads to inhibited energy transfer from the streamwise to cross-stream fluctuations, to reduced turbulence production observed in DNS, and, finally, reduced turbulence levels as well as reduced growth rate of the shear layers.
Journal ArticleDOI

A robust high-order compact method for large eddy simulation

TL;DR: In this paper, a high-order compact method for large eddy simulation (LES) of compressible turbulent flows is presented, which is applicable to the conservative form of the governing equations, thereby allowing total energy conservation.
Journal ArticleDOI

On using large-eddy simulation for the prediction of noise from cold and heated turbulent jets

TL;DR: The results of a series of large-eddy simulations of heated and unheated jets using approximately 106 grid points are presented in this article, where the authors show that the jets exhibit a faster centerline mean velocity decay rate relative to the existing data, with a corresponding 3-4'% over-prediction of the peak root-mean-square level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical simulation of a Mach 1.92 turbulent jet and its sound field

TL;DR: In this paper, a perfectly expanded turbulent Mach 1.92 jet is simulated by direct numerical solution of the compressible Navier-Stokes equations in a computational domain that includes the near acoustic field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unsteadiness of an axisymmetric separating-reattaching flow : Numerical investigation

TL;DR: In this article, the separation of a cylinder elongated by another cylinder of a smaller diameter is investigated numerically at the high subsonic regime using zonal detached eddy simulation (ZDES).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On density effects and large structure in turbulent mixing layers

TL;DR: In this article, Spark shadow pictures and measurements of density fluctuations suggest that turbulent mixing and entrainment is a process of entanglement on the scale of the large structures; some statistical properties of the latter are used to obtain an estimate of entrainedment rates, and large changes of the density ratio across the mixing layer were found to have a relatively small effect on the spreading angle.
Journal ArticleDOI

The compressible turbulent shear layer: an experimental study

TL;DR: In this paper, the growth rate and turbulent structure of the compressible, plane shear layer are investigated experimentally in a novel facility, where it is possible to flow similar or dissimilar gases of different densities and to select different Mach numbers for each stream.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reynolds-stress and dissipation-rate budgets in a turbulent channel flow

TL;DR: In this article, the Reynolds stresses and the dissipation rate of the turbulence kinetic energy are computed using direct simulation data of a turbulent channel flow using a closed-loop model, where the budget data reveal that all the terms in the budget become important close to the wall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct Simulation of a Self-Similar Turbulent Mixing Layer

TL;DR: In this article, three direct numerical simulations of incompressible turbulent plane mixing layers have been performed and all the simulations were initialized with the same two velocity fields obtained from a direct numerical simulation of a turbulent boundary layer with a momentum thickness Reynolds number of 300.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical simulation of compressible homogeneous flows in the turbulent regime

TL;DR: In this paper, a pseudospectral simulation of turbulent homogeneous flows with r.m. velocities of the order of the speed of sound was performed using the Navier-Stokes equations.
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