Pressure drag reduction via imposition of spanwise wall oscillations on a rough wall
Rahul Deshpande, Aman G. Kidanemariam, Ivan Marusic

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that spanwise wall oscillations can significantly reduce pressure drag in rough turbulent flows by attenuating vortex shedding, with effects independent of viscous drag reduction, confirmed through direct numerical simulations.
Contribution
First to show pressure drag reduction via wall oscillations in fully-rough turbulent flows, revealing vortex shedding attenuation as the key mechanism.
Findings
Pressure drag reduction exceeds 25% across roughness cases.
Pressure drag reduction is linked to vortex shedding attenuation.
Mechanism is independent of viscous drag reduction.
Abstract
The present study tests the efficacy of the well-known viscous drag reduction strategy of imposing spanwise wall oscillations to reduce pressure drag contributions in a transitional- and fully-rough turbulent wall flow. This is achieved by conducting a series of direct numerical simulations of a turbulent flow over two-dimensional (spanwise aligned) semi-cylindrical rods, placed periodically along the streamwise direction with varying streamwise spacing. Surface oscillations, imposed at fixed viscous-scaled actuation parameters optimum for smooth wall drag reduction, are found to yield substantial drag reduction (>25%) for all the rough wall cases, maintained at matched roughness Reynolds numbers. While the total drag reduction is due to a drop in both viscous and pressure drag in the case of transitionally-rough flow (i.e. with large inter-rod spacing), it is solely associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Heat Transfer Mechanisms · Fluid Dynamics and Vibration Analysis
