Changes in the boundary-layer structure at the edge of the ultimate regime in vertical natural convection
Chong Shen Ng, Andrew Ooi, Detlef Lohse, Daniel Chung

TL;DR
This study investigates the transition of boundary layers from laminar to turbulent in vertical natural convection at high Rayleigh numbers, revealing coexistence of different flow states and supporting theories of ultimate convection scaling.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of boundary layer transition in vertical natural convection, highlighting the coexistence of laminar-like and turbulent-like regions at high Rayleigh numbers.
Findings
Boundary layers show increasing shear-dominated patches with rising Ra.
Presence of streaky structures similar to wall turbulence supports transition.
Local temperature profiles follow a log-law, consistent with ultimate convection theories.
Abstract
In thermal convection for very large Rayleigh numbers (), the thermal and viscous boundary layers (BL) undergo a transition from a classical state to an ultimate state. In the former state, the BL thicknesses follow a laminar-like Prandtl-Blasius-Polhausen scaling, whereas in the latter, the BLs are turbulent with log-corrections in the sense of Prandtl and von K\'arm\'an. Here, we report evidence of this transition via changes in the BL structure of vertical natural convection (VC), which is a buoyancy driven flow between differentially heated vertical walls. The dataset spans -values from to and Prandtl number value of 0.709. For this range, the VC flow exhibits classical state behaviour in a global sense. Yet, with increasing , we observe that near-wall higher-shear patches occupy increasingly larger fractions of the wall-areas, which suggest that the…
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