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Introduction to turbulence/Free turbulent shear flows

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The last term can act to either increase or decrease vorticity production but only in non-barotropic flows. (Recall that a barotropic flow is one in which the gradients of density and pressure are co-linear, because the density is a function of the pressure only). For example, in the vertically-oriented buoyant plume generated by exhausting a lighter fluid into heavier one, the principal density gradient is across the flow and thus perpendicular to the gravitational force which is the principal contributor to the pressure gradient. As a consequence the turbulent buoyant plume develops much more quickly than its uniform density counterpart, the jet.
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The last term can act to either increase or decrease vorticity production but only in non-barotropic flows. (Recall that a barotropic flow is one in which the gradients of density and pressure are co-linear, because the density is a function of the pressure only). For example, in the vertically-oriented buoyant plume generated by exhausting a lighter fluid into heavier one, the principal density gradient is across the flow and thus perpendicular to the gravitational force which is the principal contributor to the pressure gradient. As a consequence the turbulent buoyant plume develops much more quickly than its uniform density counterpart, the jet. On the other hand, horizontal free shear flows in a stably stratified environment (fluid density decreases with height) can be quickly suppressed since the density and pressure gradients are in opposite directions.

Revision as of 17:08, 28 December 2008

Introduction

Free shear flows are inhomohomogeneous flows with mean velocity gradients that develop in the absence of boundaries. Turbulent free shear flows are commonly found in natural and engineering environments. The jet of of air issuing from one's nostrils or mouth upon exhaling, the turbulent plume from a smoldering cigarette, and the buoyant jet issuing from an erupting volcano - all illustrate both the omnipresence of free turbulent shear flows and the range of scales of such flows in the natural environment. Examples of the multitude of engineering free shear flows are the wakes behind moving bodies and the exhausts from jet engines. Most combustion processes and many mixing processes involve turbulent free shear flows.

Free shear flows in the real world are most often turbulent. Even if generated as laminar flows, they tend to become turbulent much more rapidly than the wall-bounded flows which we will discuss later. This is because the three-dimensional vorticity necessary for the transition to turbulence can develop much more rapidly in the absence of walls that inhibit the qrowth velocity components normal to them.

The tendency of free shear flows to become and remain turbulent can be greatly modified by the presence of density gradients in the flow, especially if gravitational effects are also important. Why this is the case can easily be seen by examining the vorticity equation for such flows in the absence of viscosity,


 
\left[ \frac{ \partial \omega_{i} }{ \partial t } + \tilde{u_{j}} \frac{ \partial \tilde{\omega_{i} } }{ \partial x_{j}} \right] = \tilde{\omega_{j} } \frac{ \partial \tilde{u_{i}} }{ \partial x_{j} } + \epsilon_{ijk} \frac{ \partial \tilde{ \rho } }{ \partial x_{j} } \frac{ \partial \tilde{p} }{ \partial {x_{k} } }
(1)

The last term can act to either increase or decrease vorticity production but only in non-barotropic flows. (Recall that a barotropic flow is one in which the gradients of density and pressure are co-linear, because the density is a function of the pressure only). For example, in the vertically-oriented buoyant plume generated by exhausting a lighter fluid into heavier one, the principal density gradient is across the flow and thus perpendicular to the gravitational force which is the principal contributor to the pressure gradient. As a consequence the turbulent buoyant plume develops much more quickly than its uniform density counterpart, the jet. On the other hand, horizontal free shear flows in a stably stratified environment (fluid density decreases with height) can be quickly suppressed since the density and pressure gradients are in opposite directions.

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