Coupled dynamics of wall pressure and transpiration, with implications for the modeling of tailored surfaces and turbulent drag reduction
Simon Toedtli, Anthony Leonard, Beverley McKeon

TL;DR
This study uses direct numerical simulations to explore how wall transpiration at different scales and phases influences turbulent flow behavior, with implications for designing surfaces that reduce drag.
Contribution
It demonstrates that wall transpiration at specific scales and phase relations can control flow responses, providing a new framework for modeling tailored surfaces in turbulent drag reduction.
Findings
Transpiration at streak scales can attenuate or amplify the near-wall cycle.
Transpiration at roller scales energizes spanwise rollers.
Phase relations between wall pressure and transpiration are key to flow control.
Abstract
Wall-based active and passive flow control for drag reduction in low Reynolds number (Re) turbulent flows can lead to three typical phenomena: i) attenuation or ii) amplification of the near-wall cycle, and iii) generation of spanwise rollers. The present study conducts direct numerical simulations (DNS) of a low Re turbulent channel flow and demonstrates that each flow response can be generated with a wall transpiration at two sets of spatial scales, termed "streak" and "roller" scales. The effect of the transpiration is controlled by its relative phase to the background flow, which can be parametrized by the wall pressure. Streak scales i) attenuate the near-wall cycle if transpiration and wall-pressure are approximately in-phase or ii) amplify it otherwise, and iii) roller scales energize spanwise rollers when transpiration and wall pressure are out-of-phase. The dynamics of the wall…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
