CFD Online Logo CFD Online URL
www.cfd-online.com
[Sponsors]
Home > Forums > General Forums > Main CFD Forum

Dump question about turbulence viscosity

Register Blogs Community New Posts Updated Threads Search

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old   April 2, 2013, 13:07
Default Dump question about turbulence viscosity
  #1
New Member
 
Arthur Piquet
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 18
Rep Power: 13
halowine is on a distinguished road
Hi,

I've got a question about RANS equation. It's maybe a dumb question but I've to make sure that I understand the concept.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reynold...okes_equations

So, because of the non-linearity of the convection term in NS equation and of the mesh size, this term won't be solve accurately enough for a good solution. In RANS modeling we try simulate this lost in the convection term by a term (ui'uj') with a turbulent viscosity coefficient (calculate by k-eps for example). But, what I don't understand is that if you have an inviscid flow, (or EULER eq.) you will still need to resolve this term (with k-eps)!! A long time ago I was thinking that the ui'uj' term that we want to simulate, was coming from the tensor term and not the convection term.... so now I don't understand anymore!

Sorry for my bad spelling and english, I'm french!!

Thanks
halowine is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 2, 2013, 13:31
Default
  #2
Senior Member
 
Filippo Maria Denaro
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,768
Rep Power: 71
FMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura about
Quote:
Originally Posted by halowine View Post
Hi,

I've got a question about RANS equation. It's maybe a dumb question but I've to make sure that I understand the concept.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reynold...okes_equations

So, because of the non-linearity of the convection term in NS equation and of the mesh size, this term won't be solve accurately enough for a good solution. In RANS modeling we try simulate this lost in the convection term by a term (ui'uj') with a turbulent viscosity coefficient (calculate by k-eps for example). But, what I don't understand is that if you have an inviscid flow, (or EULER eq.) you will still need to resolve this term (with k-eps)!! A long time ago I was thinking that the ui'uj' term that we want to simulate, was coming from the tensor term and not the convection term.... so now I don't understand anymore!

Sorry for my bad spelling and english, I'm french!!

Thanks

some suggestions to help in your understanding:

- in RANS v' is the residual defined by v(x,t) - <v>(t) and does not depends on the mesh size but depends on the statistical average.
- for inviscid flows, one can not speak of "real turbulence" since the energy cascade is never terminated by the physical dissipation. However, the physical mechanism that onset turbulence is retained in the quadratic non-linear term. You can not resolve all the scales inifinitely generated by the non linearity therefore you have to model the behavior behind some threshold. This means to se some turbulence model also for inviscid flows ...
FMDenaro is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 2, 2013, 13:55
Default
  #3
New Member
 
Arthur Piquet
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 18
Rep Power: 13
halowine is on a distinguished road
Thank you, It's more clear now.

But it's because of the mesh size that we have to consider this additional term ? In DNS, the mesh is enough thin to calculate directly the convection term and so not use a turbulence model.

Just what happens if you use a DNS mesh with a RANS case? The turbulence term will tend to zero? so what's the difference with LES model?

Thanks anyway!
halowine is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 2, 2013, 14:05
Default
  #4
Senior Member
 
Filippo Maria Denaro
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,768
Rep Power: 71
FMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura about
Quote:
Originally Posted by halowine View Post
Thank you, It's more clear now.

But it's because of the mesh size that we have to consider this additional term ? In DNS, the mesh is enough thin to calculate directly the convection term and so not use a turbulence model.

Just what happens if you use a DNS mesh with a RANS case? The turbulence term will tend to zero? so what's the difference with LES model?

Thanks anyway!
for inviscid flows, you can think of turbulence as somehow analoug of the shock-wave discontinuity: there is no mesh size able to resolve.
In other words, DNS is not realizable for inviscid flows...
FMDenaro is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 11, 2013, 19:15
Default
  #5
New Member
 
Arthur Piquet
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 18
Rep Power: 13
halowine is on a distinguished road
I've got another dumb question about k-eps model for example.

Let's say a flow perfectly non-turbulent reach a flat plate wall. According to the theory, the fluid will be laminar until Re~300,000 when it will be transitory and then fully turbulent.

Now, I want to simulate this with k-eps and without wall treatment. My initial condition for k and eps are 0 right? (non turbulent flow). So, if I take the k equation and epsilon equation and I look up all the term inside, I don't understand where did the production of turbulence come from? because all the term are equal to 0 (because k=0 and eps=0).





So I was thinking, maybe the source term produce something near the wall?
do you know the actual equation for this (without wall treatment)?

Thank you and sorry again for my spelling.
halowine is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 12, 2013, 03:21
Default
  #6
Senior Member
 
Filippo Maria Denaro
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,768
Rep Power: 71
FMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura about
I don't think is correct to simulate a transitional flow with RANS formulation...
FMDenaro is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 13, 2013, 08:46
Default
  #7
Far
Super Moderator
 
Sijal
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Islamabad
Posts: 4,553
Blog Entries: 6
Rep Power: 54
Far has a spectacular aura aboutFar has a spectacular aura about
Send a message via Skype™ to Far
Quote:
Originally Posted by FMDenaro View Post
I don't think is correct to simulate a transitional flow with RANS formulation...
What do you say about K-kl-w and SST- Gamma theta transition models ?
Far is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   April 13, 2013, 08:54
Default
  #8
Senior Member
 
Filippo Maria Denaro
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,768
Rep Power: 71
FMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura aboutFMDenaro has a spectacular aura about
Quote:
Originally Posted by Far View Post
What do you say about K-kl-w and SST- Gamma theta transition models ?
well, my concern is about the RANS formulation, not about a particular modelling...
In my idea there is no sense in a statistical RANS formulation wherein you have simultaneously laminar, transitional and turbulent conditions.
But someone else could disagree ...
FMDenaro is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Problem with divergence TDK FLUENT 13 December 14, 2018 06:00
turbulence viscosity eddiegolpesar FLUENT 0 September 5, 2010 09:06
non-physical turbulence viscosity in coaxial free-jet simulation with species Felipeb FLUENT 3 August 2, 2010 09:27
TVR (Turbulence viscosity ratio) and reversed flow Deside FLUENT 2 April 28, 2010 04:04
question about turbulence model selection and sensitivity karananand Main CFD Forum 1 February 26, 2010 04:41


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:05.