We study the high-Reynolds-number behavior of a turbulent boundary layer in the low supersonic regime through very-large-scale direct numerical simulation (DNS). For the first time a Reynolds number is attained in DNS (Re-tau = delta/delta(v) approximate to 4000, where delta is the boundary layer thickness and delta(v) is the viscous length scale) at which theoretical predictions and experiments suggest the occurrence of phenomena pertaining to the asymptotic Reynolds number regime. From comparison with previous DNS data at lower Reynolds number we find evidence of a continuing trend toward a stronger imprint of the outer-layer structures onto the near-wall region. This effect is clearly manifested both in flow visualizations, and in energy spectra. More than a decade of nearly-logarithmic variation is observed in the mean velocity profiles, with log-law constants k approximate to 0.394, C approximate to 4.84, and a trend similar to experiments. We find some supporting evidence for the debated existence of a k(-1) region in the power spectrum of streamwise velocity fluctuations, which extends up to y(+) approximate to 150, and of a k(-5/3) spectral range in the outer layer. (C) 2013 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4792164]
Probing high-Reynolds-number effects in numerical boundary layers / Pirozzoli, Sergio; Bernardini, Matteo. - In: PHYSICS OF FLUIDS. - ISSN 1070-6631. - STAMPA. - 25:2(2013), p. 021704. [10.1063/1.4792164]
Probing high-Reynolds-number effects in numerical boundary layers
PIROZZOLI, Sergio;BERNARDINI, MATTEO
2013
Abstract
We study the high-Reynolds-number behavior of a turbulent boundary layer in the low supersonic regime through very-large-scale direct numerical simulation (DNS). For the first time a Reynolds number is attained in DNS (Re-tau = delta/delta(v) approximate to 4000, where delta is the boundary layer thickness and delta(v) is the viscous length scale) at which theoretical predictions and experiments suggest the occurrence of phenomena pertaining to the asymptotic Reynolds number regime. From comparison with previous DNS data at lower Reynolds number we find evidence of a continuing trend toward a stronger imprint of the outer-layer structures onto the near-wall region. This effect is clearly manifested both in flow visualizations, and in energy spectra. More than a decade of nearly-logarithmic variation is observed in the mean velocity profiles, with log-law constants k approximate to 0.394, C approximate to 4.84, and a trend similar to experiments. We find some supporting evidence for the debated existence of a k(-1) region in the power spectrum of streamwise velocity fluctuations, which extends up to y(+) approximate to 150, and of a k(-5/3) spectral range in the outer layer. (C) 2013 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4792164]I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.