Modulation of the turbulence regeneration cycle by inertial particles in planar Couette flow
Guiquan Wang, David Richter

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulations to explore how inertial particles influence the self-sustaining turbulence cycle in plane Couette flow, revealing that particle inertia can either trigger or suppress turbulence depending on its magnitude.
Contribution
It demonstrates how inertial particles modulate the turbulence regeneration cycle, highlighting the roles of particle inertia and phase coupling in flow stability and structure.
Findings
Low-inertia particles trigger laminar-to-turbulent transition.
High-inertia particles tend to stabilize turbulence.
Particles influence large-scale vortices and streaks, affecting turbulence intensity.
Abstract
Two-way coupled direct numerical simulations are used to investigate the effects of inertial particles on self-sustained, turbulent coherent structures (i.e. the so-called the regeneration cycle) in plane Couette flow at low Reynolds number just above the onset of transition. Tests show two limiting behaviors with increasing particle inertia, similar to the results from the linear stability analysis of saffman, 1962: low-inertia particles trigger the laminar-to-turbulent instability whereas high-inertia particles tend to stabilize turbulence due to the extra dissipation induced by particle-fluid coupling. Furthermore, it is found that the streamwise coupling between phases is the dominant factor in damping the turbulence and is highly related to the spatial distribution of the particles. The presence of particles in different turbulent coherent structures (large scale vortices or large…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Aeolian processes and effects · Granular flow and fluidized beds
