The smooth-wall-like behaviour of turbulence over drag-altering surfaces: a unifying virtual-origin framework
Joseph I. Ibrahim, Garazi G\'omez-de-Segura, Daniel Chung, Ricardo, Garc\'ia-Mayoral

TL;DR
This paper introduces a unifying virtual-origin framework to understand turbulence over drag-altering surfaces, showing that turbulence remains smooth-wall-like when referenced to the correct virtual origin, which predicts drag effects.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that the virtual origin perceived by turbulence is the key factor in turbulence behaviour over textured surfaces, unifying various drag-reduction mechanisms.
Findings
Turbulence remains smooth-wall-like when referenced to the correct virtual origin.
The virtual origin for turbulence depends on wall-normal and spanwise slip lengths.
Drag effects can be predicted using a smooth-wall eddy-viscosity model with virtual origins.
Abstract
We conduct direct simulations of turbulent channels imposing different virtual origins for all three velocities using Robin, slip-like boundary conditions to study the effect of displacing the origins perceived by different flow components, a mechanism common to small-textured surfaces. We also explore this effect using opposition control. For riblets, Luchini et al. (1991) proposed that their effect could be reduced to the offset between the streamwise- and spanwise-velocity origins, the latter being the origin perceived by turbulence. Later results on superhydrophobic surfaces suggest that the apparent wall-normal-velocity origin could also play a role. Our results support that the relevant parameter is the offset between the origins perceived by the mean flow and by turbulence. The former is determined by the streamwise slip length, but the latter depends on both the wall-normal and…
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