Does the choice of the forcing term affect flow statistics in DNS of turbulent channel flow?
Maurizio Quadrio, Bettina Frohnapfel, Yosuke Hasegawa

TL;DR
This study investigates how different forcing methods in DNS of turbulent channel flow influence flow statistics, finding minimal differences in typical metrics but notable variations in extreme wall friction events.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the choice of forcing term has limited impact on standard statistics but affects the probability of extreme wall friction events in DNS.
Findings
Standard flow statistics are largely unaffected by forcing method.
Extreme wall friction events are less probable in constant flow rate simulations.
Differences in autocorrelations are small and within statistical uncertainty.
Abstract
We seek possible statistical consequences of the way a forcing term is added to the Navier--Stokes equations in the Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) of incompressible channel flow. Simulations driven by constant flow rate, constant pressure gradient and constant power input are used to build large databases, and in particular to store the complete temporal trace of the wall-shear stress for later analysis. As these approaches correspond to different dynamical systems, it can in principle be envisaged that these differences are reflect by certain statistics of the turbulent flow field. The instantaneous realizations of the flow in the various simulations are obviously different, but, as expected, the usual one-point, one-time statistics do not show any appreciable difference. However, the PDF for the fluctuations of the streamwise component of wall friction reveals that the simulation…
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