Homogeneity and isotropy in a laboratory turbulent flow
Gabriele Bellani, Evan A. Variano

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel stirred tank design that produces large-scale, high-Reynolds-number homogeneous isotropic turbulence suitable for detailed laboratory studies of turbulence and suspensions.
Contribution
The paper presents a new tank configuration that achieves a significantly larger homogeneous isotropic turbulent region at high Reynolds number with minimal mean flow, enhancing experimental turbulence research.
Findings
Homogeneous isotropic region extends at least twice the integral length scale in one direction.
Turbulent kinetic energy is measured at 6.07×10^{-4} m^2/s^2.
Taylor-scale Reynolds number reaches 334.
Abstract
We present a new design for a stirred tank that is forced by two parallel planar arrays of randomly actuated synthetic jets. This arrangement creates turbulence at high Reynolds number with low mean flow. Most importantly, it exhibits a region of 3D homogeneous isotropic turbulence that is significantly larger than the integral lengthscale. These features are essential for enabling laboratory measurements of turbulent suspensions. We use quantitative imaging to confirm isotropy at large, small, and intermediate scales by examining one-- and two--point statistics at the tank center. We then repeat these same measurements to confirm that the values measured at the tank center are constant over a large homogeneous region. In the direction normal to the symmetry plane, our measurements demonstrate that the homogeneous region extends for at least twice the integral length scale cm.…
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