Two-dimensional dynamics of elasto-inertial turbulence and its role in polymer drag reduction
S. Sid, Y. Dubief, V.E. Terrapon

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the two-dimensional nature of elasto-inertial instability in turbulence, explores its role in three-dimensional flows, and shows how small elastic scales influence turbulence sustainability in polymer solutions.
Contribution
It reveals the bi-dimensional elasto-inertial instability's role in turbulence and highlights the importance of small elastic scales for self-sustained flow in polymer solutions.
Findings
Sustained turbulence occurs in 2D sub-critical flows, confirming bi-dimensional instability.
Elasto-inertial instability dominates at high Wi, suppressing Newtonian structures.
High polymer diffusion damps elastic scales, leading to flow laminarization.
Abstract
The goal of the present study is: (i) to demonstrate the two-dimensional nature of the elasto-inertial instability in elasto-inertial turbulence (EIT), (ii) to identify the role of the bi-dimensional instability in three-dimensional EIT flows and (iii) to establish the role of the small elastic scales in the mechanism of self-sustained EIT. Direct numerical simulations of FENE-P fluid flows are performed in two- and three-dimensional channels. The Reynolds number is set to which is sub-critical for 2D flows but beyond transition for 3D ones. The polymer properties correspond to those of typical dilute polymer solutions and two moderate Weissenberg numbers, , are considered. The simulation results show that sustained turbulence can be observed in 2D sub-critical flows, confirming the existence of a bi-dimensional elasto-inertial…
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