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Direct numerical simulation of a turbulent hydraulic jump: turbulence statistics and air entrainment

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TLDR
In this article, the authors presented a direct numerical simulation of a stationary turbulent hydraulic jump with inflow Froude number of 2, Weber number of 1820 and density ratio of 831, consistent with ambient water-air systems, all based on the inlet height and inlet velocity.
Abstract
We present direct numerical simulation (DNS) of a stationary turbulent hydraulic jump with inflow Froude number of 2, Weber number of 1820 and density ratio of 831, consistent with ambient water–air systems, all based on the inlet height and inlet velocity A non-dissipative geometric volume of fluid (VOF) method is used to track the detailed interactions between turbulent flow structures and the nonlinear interface dynamics Level set equations are also solved concurrent with VOF in order to calculate the interface curvature and surface tension forces The mesh resolution is set to resolve a wide range of interfacial scales including the Hinze scale Calculations are compared against experimental data of void fraction and interfacial scales indicating, reasonable agreement despite a Reynolds number mismatch Multiple calculations are performed confirming weak sensitivity of low-order statistics and void fraction on the Reynolds number The presented results provide, for the first time, a comprehensive quantitative data for a wide range of phenomena in a turbulent breaking wave using DNS These include mean velocity fields, Reynolds stresses, turbulence production and dissipation, velocity spectra and air entrainment data In addition, we present the energy budget as a function of streamwise location by keeping track of various energy exchange processes in the wake of the jump The kinetic energy is mostly transferred to pressure work, potential energy and dissipation while surface energy plays a less significant role Our results indicate that the rate associated with various energy exchange processes peak at different streamwise locations, with exchange to pressure work flux peaking first, followed by potential energy flux and then dissipation The energy exchange process spans a streamwise length of order jump heights Furthermore, we report statistics associated with bubble transport downstream of the jump The bubble formation is found to have a periodic nature Meaning that the bubbles are generated in patches with a specific frequency associated with the roll-up frequency of the roller at the toe of the jump, with its footprint apparent in the velocity energy spectrum Our study also provides the ensemble-averaged statistics of the flow which we present in this paper These results are useful for the development and validation of reduced-order models such as dissipation models in wave dynamics simulations, Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes models and air entrainment models

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A two-phase mixing layer between parallel gas and liquid streams: multiphase turbulence statistics and influence of interfacial instability

TL;DR: In this article, a numerical simulation of a two-phase gas-liquid mixing layer that lies in the absolute instability regime is conducted, and the results obtained with the finest mesh are shown to be not far from converged results of turbulent dissipation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical Simulation of Hydraulic Jumps. Part 2: Recent Results and Future Outlook

TL;DR: It is expected that with the increase in the computational capabilities, the RANS-based numerical studies of the hydraulic jump will approach the prototype scale problems, which are of great relevance for hydraulic engineers, while the application at this scale of the most advanced tools, such as LES and DNS, is still beyond expectations for the foreseeable future.
Journal ArticleDOI

A two-phase mixing layer between parallel gas and liquid streams: multiphase turbulence statistics and influence of interfacial instability

TL;DR: In this paper, a numerical simulation of a two-phase gas-liquid mixing layer that lies in the absolute instability regime is conducted and the results obtained with the finest mesh are shown to be close to converged results of turbulent dissipation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The turbulent bubble break-up cascade. Part 2. Numerical simulations of breaking waves

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an analytical toolkit for population balance analysis in two-phase flows, including the expected -10/3 power-law exponent for the super-Hinze-scale size distribution, which suggests the emergence of different physical mechanisms during different phases of the breaking wave evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planar hydraulic jumps in thin film flow

TL;DR: In this article, a modified expression for Froude number was proposed to predict hydraulic jumps in inclined channels, showing that the scaling relationship originally proposed for jump location in horizontal channels is applicable for both upslope and downslope flows.
References
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Fronts propagating with curvature-dependent speed: algorithms based on Hamilton-Jacobi formulations

TL;DR: The PSC algorithm as mentioned in this paper approximates the Hamilton-Jacobi equations with parabolic right-hand-sides by using techniques from the hyperbolic conservation laws, which can be used also for more general surface motion problems.
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Application of a Fractional-Step Method to Incompressible Navier-Stokes Equations

TL;DR: In this paper, a numerical method for computing three-dimensional, time-dependent incompressible flows is presented based on a fractional-step, or time-splitting, scheme in conjunction with the approximate-factorization technique.

Algorithms Based on Hamilton-Jacobi Formulations

TL;DR: New numerical algorithms, called PSC algorithms, are devised for following fronts propagating with curvature-dependent speed, which approximate Hamilton-Jacobi equations with parabolic right-hand-sides by using techniques from the hyperbolic conservation laws.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamentals of the hydrodynamic mechanism of splitting in dispersion processes

TL;DR: In this paper, Taylor's experiments on the breakup of a drop in simple types of viscous flow, (b) breakup of an air stream, and (c) emulsification in a turbulent flow are studied.
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