Effects of shock topology on temperature field in compressible turbulence
Qionglin Ni, Shiyi Chen

TL;DR
This study investigates how different shock topologies, shocklet and shock wave, influence temperature statistics in compressible turbulence through simulations, revealing distinct spectral behaviors and thermodynamic properties.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of temperature fields under different shock topologies, highlighting their effects on spectra, anisotropy, and energy conversion mechanisms.
Findings
Temperature spectrum follows k^-5/3 in SFT and k^-2 in CFT.
Temperature field exhibits 'ramp-cliff' structures in SFT and large-scale features in CFT.
Pressure-dilatation plays a key role in temperature variance and energy conversion.
Abstract
Effects of two types of shock topology, namely, small-scale shocklet and large-scale shock wave, on the statistics of temperature in compressible turbulence were investigated by simulations. The shocklet and shock wave are caused by the solenoidal and compressive modes of driven forces, respectively. Hereafter, the related two flows are called as SFT and CFT, respectively. It shows that in SFT the temperature spectrum follows the k^-5/3 power law, and the temperature field has "ramp-cliff" structures. By contrast, in CFT the temperature spectrum obeys the k^-2 power law, and the temperature field is dominated by large-scale rarefaction and compression. The power-law exponents for the p.d.f. of large negative dilatation are -2.5 in SFT and -3.5 in CFT, close to theoretical values. For the isentropic assumption of thermodynamic variables, the derivation in SFT grows with the turbulent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Fluid Dynamics and Aerodynamics · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Gas Dynamics and Kinetic Theory
