Direct Numerical Simulation of a Turbulent Boundary Layer with Strong Pressure Gradients
Riccardo Balin, Kenneth E. Jansen

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulation to analyze the effects of strong pressure gradients on a turbulent boundary layer over a bump, revealing relaminarization, turbulence suppression, and retransition phenomena.
Contribution
It provides detailed DNS insights into boundary layer behavior under alternating strong favorable and adverse pressure gradients, highlighting limitations of RANS models.
Findings
FPG causes boundary layer relaminarization and turbulence weakening.
APG leads to turbulence retransition and flow energization.
RANS models poorly predict near-wall pressure gradient effects.
Abstract
The turbulent boundary layer over a Gaussian shaped bump is computed by direct numerical simulation (DNS) of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations. The two-dimensional bump causes a series of strong pressure gradients alternating in rapid succession. At the inflow, the momentum thickness Reynolds number is approximately 1,000 and the boundary layer thickness is 1/8 of the bump height. DNS results show that the strong favorable pressure gradient (FPG) causes the boundary layer to enter a relaminarization process. The near-wall turbulence is significantly weakened and becomes intermittent, however relaminarization does not complete. The streamwise velocity profiles deviate above the standard logarithmic law and the Reynolds shear stress is reduced. The strong acceleration also suppresses the wall-shear normalized turbulent kinetic energy production rate. At the bump peak, where the…
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