Stabilisation and drag reduction of pipe flows by flattening the base profile
E. Marensi, A. P. Willis, R. R. Kerswell

TL;DR
Flattening the velocity profile in pipe flows, both laminar and turbulent, enhances stability and reduces drag, with artificial body forces mimicking experimental baffles showing promising flow control benefits.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that profile flattening improves nonlinear stability and drag reduction in pipe flows, introducing an efficient method to evaluate transition thresholds using the minimal seed.
Findings
Flattened profiles increase flow stability.
Artificial body forces can induce flow relaminarisation.
Significant drag reduction observed with large disturbances.
Abstract
Recent experimental observations (Kuehnen et al., 2018) have shown that flattening a turbulent streamwise velocity profile in pipe flow destabilises the turbulence so that the flow relaminarises. We show that a similar phenomenon exists for laminar pipe flow profiles in the sense that the nonlinear stability of the laminar state is enhanced as the profile becomes more flattened. Significant drag reduction is also observed for the turbulent flow when triggered by sufficiently large disturbances. The flattening is produced by an artificial body force designed to mimick a baffle used in the experiments of Kuehnen et al. (2018) and the nonlinear stability measured by the size of the energy of the initial perturbations needed to trigger transition. In order to make the latter computation more efficient, we examine how indicative the minimal seed for transition is in measuring transition…
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