Designing a minimal baffle to destabilise turbulence in pipe flows
Elena Marensi, Zijing Ding, Ashley P. Willis, Rich R. Kerswell

TL;DR
This paper designs and optimizes a minimal axisymmetric baffle to destabilize turbulence and promote relaminarization in pipe flows, analyzing its effectiveness across different Reynolds numbers and its impact on flow stress and pressure drop.
Contribution
It introduces a novel optimization approach for designing minimal baffles to destabilize turbulence in pipe flows, considering both viscous dissipation and energy consumption.
Findings
Optimal baffle is axisymmetric and near the pipe wall.
Relaminarization effectiveness increases with Reynolds number.
Large stress reduction at the wall but increased pressure drop.
Abstract
Motivated by the results of recent experiments (K\"uhnen et al., Flow Turb. Combust., vol. 100, 2018, pp. 919-943), we consider the problem of designing a baffle (an obstacle to the flow) to relaminarise turbulence in pipe flows. Modelling the baffle as a spatial distribution of linear drag within the flow ( is the total velocity field and a scalar field), two different optimisation problems are considered to design at a Reynolds number . In the first, the smallest baffle defined in terms of a norm of is sought which minimises the viscous dissipation rate of the flow. In the second, a baffle which minimises the total energy consumption of the flow is treated. Both problems indicate that the baffle should be axisymmetric and radially localised near the…
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