Transition to turbulence in pulsating pipe flow
Duo Xu, Sascha Warnecke, Baofang Song, Xingyu Ma, Bj\"orn Hof

TL;DR
This study investigates how pulsating flow affects the transition to turbulence in pipes, revealing three distinct regimes based on pulsation frequency, with implications for understanding flow stability under periodic conditions.
Contribution
It applies recent transition theories to pulsating pipe flow, identifying three regimes and clarifying how pulsation frequency influences turbulence onset.
Findings
At low Womersley numbers, turbulence decay delays transition.
In high frequency limit, transition thresholds match steady pipe flow.
Intermediate frequencies cause a sharp drop in transition threshold.
Abstract
Fluid flows in nature and applications are frequently subject to periodic velocity modulations. Surprisingly, even for the generic case of flow through a straight pipe, there is little consensus regarding the influence of pulsation on the transition threshold to turbulence: while most studies predict a monotonically increasing threshold with pulsation frequency (i.e. Womersley number, ), others observe a decreasing threshold for identical parameters and only observe an increasing threshold at low . In the present study we apply recent advances in the understanding of transition in steady shear flows to pulsating pipe flow. For moderate pulsation amplitudes we find that the first instability encountered is subcritical (i.e. requiring finite amplitude disturbances) and gives rise to localized patches of turbulence ("puffs") analogous to steady pipe flow. By monitoring the…
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