Mixed modeling for large-eddy simulation: The single-layer and two-layer minimum-dissipation-Bardina models
L. B. Streher, M. H. Silvis, P. Cifani, R. W. C. P. Verstappen

TL;DR
This paper introduces mixed models combining functional and structural approaches for large-eddy simulation of turbulent flows, improving accuracy especially near walls at various Reynolds numbers.
Contribution
It develops the AMD-Bardina mixed model and extends it into a two-layer approach for better wall-bounded flow predictions.
Findings
Improved turbulence predictions over single models.
Two-layer model accurately captures mean velocity inflection.
Excellent agreement with experimental data in channel flows.
Abstract
Predicting the behavior of turbulent flows using large-eddy simulation requires modeling of the subgrid-scale stress tensor. This tensor can be approximated using mixed models, which combine the dissipative nature of functional models with the capability of structural models to approximate out-of-equilibrium effects. We propose a mathematical basis to mix (functional) eddy-viscosity models with the (structural) Bardina model. By taking an anisotropic minimum-dissipation (AMD) model for the eddy viscosity, we obtain the (single-layer) AMD-Bardina model. In order to also obtain a physics-conforming model for wall-bounded flows, we further develop this mixed model into a two-layer approach: the near-wall region is parameterized with the AMD-Bardina model, whereas the outer region is computed with the Bardina model. The single-layer and two-layer AMD-Bardina models are tested in turbulent…
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