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Journal ArticleDOI

On transition in a pipe. Part 1. The origin of puffs and slugs and the flow in a turbulent slug

Israel Wygnanski, +1 more
- 19 Jun 1973 - 
- Vol. 59, Iss: 2, pp 281-335
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TLDR
In this paper, hot-wire measurements were taken in a pipe at Reynolds numbers corresponding to the onset of turbulence, where the pipe was smooth and carefully aligned so that turbulent slugs appeared naturally at Re > 5 × 104.
Abstract
Conditionally sampled hot-wire measurements were taken in a pipe at Reynolds numbers corresponding to the onset of turbulence. The pipe was smooth and carefully aligned so that turbulent slugs appeared naturally at Re > 5 × 104. Transition could be initiated at lower Re by introducing disturbances into the inlet. For smooth or only slightly disturbed inlets, transition occurs as a result of instabilities in the boundary layer long before the flow becomes fully developed in the pipe. This type of transition gives rise to turbulent slugs which occupy the entire cross-section of the pipe, and they grow in length as they proceed downstream. The leading and trailing ‘fronts’ of a turbulent slug are clearly defined. A unique relation seems to exist between the velocity of the interface and the velocity of the fluid by which relaminarization of turbulent fluid is prevented. The length of slugs is of the same order of magnitude as the length of the pipe, although the lengths of individual slugs differ at the same flow conditions. The structure of the flow in the interior of a slug is identical to that in a fully developed turbulent pipe flow. Near the interfaces, where the mean motion changes from a laminar to a turbulent state, the velocity profiles develop inflexions. The total turbulent intensity near the interfaces is very high and it may reach 15% of the velocity at the centre of the pipe. A turbulent energy balance was made for the flow near the interfaces. All of the terms contributing to the energy balance must vanish identically somewhere on the interface if that portion of the interface does not entrain non-turbulent fluid. It appears that diffusion which also includes pressure transport is the most likely mechanism by which turbulent energy can be transferred to non-turbulent fluid. The dissipation term at the interface is negligible and increases with increasing turbulent energy towards the interior of the slug.Mixed laminar and turbulent flows were observed far downstream for \[ 2000 < Re < 2700 \] when a large disturbance was introduced into the inlet. The flow in the vicinity of the inlet, however, was turbulent at much lower Re. The turbulent regions which are convected downstream at a velocity which is slightly smaller than the average velocity in the pipe we shall henceforth call puffs. The leading front of a puff does not have a clearly defined interface and the trailing front is clearly defined only in the vicinity of the centre-line. The length and structure of the puff is independent of the character of the obstruction which created it, provided that the latter is big enough to produce turbulent flow at the inlet. The puff will be discussed in more detail later.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Definition of sub-classes in sinusoidal pulsatile air flow at onset of transition to turbulence in view of velocity and frictional field analyses

TL;DR: In this article, the authors defined the sub-classes in sinusoidal pulsatile pipe flow at the onset of transition to turbulence through the analyses of the velocity and the frictional field measurements conducted.
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Laminar to fully turbulent flow in a pipe: Scalar patches, structural duality of turbulent spots and transitional overshoot

TL;DR: In this article, scalar flashes, turbulent spots and transition statistics in a direct numerical simulation of a 500 radius-long pipe flow with a radial-mode inlet disturbance were found to contain two different types of eddies.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a study on the nonlinear dynamics of small long-wave disturbances to the laminar state in non-rotating axisymmetric Poiseuille pipe flows.
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Analysis and modeling of localized invariant solutions in pipe flow

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compute spatially localized relative periodic orbits in long pipes and show that their upstream and downstream fronts decay exponentially towards the laminar profile, and the resulting model yields the spatial decay rate and the front velocity profiles of the periodic orbits as a function of Reynolds number, azimuthal wave number and propagation speed.
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Designing a minimal baffle to destabilise turbulence in pipe flows

TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered the problem of designing a baffle (an obstacle to the flow) to relaminarise turbulence in pipe flows and found that the optimal baffle should be axisymmetric and radially localised near the pipe wall, but struggle to predict the optimal streamwise extent.
References
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Book

The Structure of Turbulent Shear Flow

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a method to find the optimal set of words for a given sentence in a sentence using the Bibliogr. Index Reference Record created on 2004-09-07, modified on 2016-08-08
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The structure of turbulent boundary layers

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Orderly Structure in Jet Turbulence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that a large-scale orderly pattern may exist in the noiseproducing region of a round subsonic jet by observing the evolution of orderly flow with advancing Reynolds number.
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An Experimental Investigation of the Circumstances Which Determine Whether the Motion of Water Shall Be Direct or Sinuous, and of the Law of Resistance in Parallel Channels

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the general character of the motion of fluids in contact with solid surfaces depends on the relation between a physical constant of the fluid and the product of the linear dimensions of the space occupied by the fluid.
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The three-dimensional nature of boundary-layer instability

TL;DR: In this article, an experimental investigation is described, in which principal emphasis is given to revealing the nature of the motions in the non-linear range of boundary-layer instability and the onset of turbulence, and it is demonstrated that the actual breakdown of the wave motion into turbulence is a consequence of a new instability which arises in the aforementioned three-dimensional wave motion.
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