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enganas June 5, 2019 09:10

Numeca fine/open
 
Dear all,
I am using Numeca Fine/open.

In the output section, which includes all the relevant variables you want to compute, such as velocity, vorticity, TKE, dissipation etc....

However, if I am interested in calculating the Turbulence Intensity. How can I do that?
Secondly, it doesn't show in the output the fluctuations u' v' w'.

I am interested in the fluctuations to calculate the TI, Re stresses and other turbulence properties.

Could anyone inform me how can I get access to these fluctuations.

Thanks,

enganas

Hamidzoka June 10, 2019 23:55

Hi;
If Isotropic turbulence models based on Boussinesq hypothesis are used (like K-epsilon, K-omega,...) Reynolds stress components as well as TI are calculated based on K itself and mean flow velocities. In other words, this hypothesis tries to model Reynolds stresses rather than calculating them. In this case all normal components of Reynolds stresses are equal. That's why they are called isotropic models.
Only in anisotropic turbulence models like RSM, Reynolds stresses are explicitly calculated, definitely at higher computational costs, and can be used directly in post-process and calculation of TI.

Regards

enganas June 11, 2019 11:31

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hamidzoka (Post 735913)
Hi;
If Isotropic turbulence models based on Boussinesq hypothesis are used (like K-epsilon, K-omega,...) Reynolds stress components as well as TI are calculated based on K itself and mean flow velocities. In other words, this hypothesis tries to model Reynolds stresses rather than calculating them. In this case all normal components of Reynolds stresses are equal. That's why they are called isotropic models.
Only in anisotropic turbulence models like RSM, Reynolds stresses are explicitly calculated, definitely at higher computational costs, and can be used directly in post-process and calculation of TI.

Regards

Dear Hamidzoka,
Thanks for your reply.
In my simulations am using k-omega SST.

Can I obtain the TI from TKE data. is there any relation I can find.

Thanks,

Hamidzoka June 12, 2019 06:49

Hi;
One simple relation is "sqrt(2/3*K)/(Mean velocity Magnitude)".
More descriptions can be found in the literature.

Regards


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