On the concentration distribution in turbulent thermals
Ludovic Huguet, Victor Lherm, Renaud Deguen, Joris Heyman, Tanguy Le Borgne

TL;DR
This study investigates the internal concentration distribution in turbulent thermals using experiments and simulations, revealing self-similarity and exponential distribution characteristics, with minimal diffusivity impact within the studied Peclet range.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the concentration distribution and its self-similar behavior in turbulent thermals, combining experimental and numerical approaches.
Findings
Concentration distribution is self-similar over time.
Distributions are well approximated by an exponential PDF.
Diffusivity has little effect on concentration distribution within the studied Peclet range.
Abstract
Turbulent thermals emerge in a wide variety of geophysical and industrial flows, such as atmospheric cumulus convection and pollutant dispersal in oceans and lakes. When a buoyant fluid mass rises, or sinks, heat and mass transfers occur by the engulfment of the fresh surrounding fluid inside the thermal - a process that spans over multiple scales from macroscopic entrainment of ambient fluid to microscopic diffusive processes. Turbulent thermals are typically investigated through their integral properties (radius, depth, entrainment rate). However, mixing processes depend on the internal distribution of concentration or temperature inside a thermal, which remains poorly constrained. Here, we use laboratory fluid dynamics experiments and direct numerical simulations to investigate the mixing of a passive scalar in turbulent thermals with large Reynolds numbers. We track the evolution of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
