Passive scalar dispersion in a turbulent boundary layer from a line source at the wall and downstream of an obstacle

被引:51
|
作者
Vincont, JY
Simoëns, S
Ayrault, M
Wallace, JM
机构
[1] Ecole Cent Lyon, CNRS, UMR 5509, Lab Mecan Fluides & Acoust, F-69131 Ecully, France
[2] Univ Maryland, Dept Mech Engn, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0022112000001865
中图分类号
O3 [力学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0801 ;
摘要
Simultaneous measurements of the velocity and scalar concentration fields have been made in the plume emitting from a two-dimensional line source at the wall. The source is one obstacle height, h, downstream of a two-dimensional square obstacle located on the wall of a turbulent boundary layer. These measurements were made in two fluid media: water and air. In both media particle image velocimetry (PIV) was used for the velocity field measurements. For the scalar concentration measurements laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) was used for the water flow and Mie scattering diffusion (MSD) for the air how Profiles of the mean and root-mean-square streamwise and wall-normal velocity components, Reynolds shear stress and mean and root-mean-square scalar concentration were determined at x = 4h and 6h downstream of the obstacle in the recirculation region and above it in the mixing region. At these streamwise stations the scalar fluxes, (uc) over bar and (vc) over bar, were also determined from the simultaneous velocity and scalar concentration field data. Both of these fluxes change sign from negative to positive with increasing distance from the wall in the recirculating region at 4h. A conditional analysis of the data was carried out by sorting them into the eight categories (octants) given by the sign combinations of the three variables: +/-u, +/-v and +/-c. The octants with combinations of these three variables that correspond to types of scalar concentration flux motions that can be approximated by mean gradient scalar transport models are the octants that make the dominant contributions to (uc) over bar and (vc) over bar. However, in the recirculating zone, counter-gradient transport type motions also make significant contributions. Based on this conditional analysis, second-order mean gradient models of the scalar and the momentum fluxes were constructed; they compare well to the measured values at 4h and 6h, particularly for the streamwise scalar flux, (uc) over bar. Additional measurements of the velocity and concentration fields were made further downstream of the reattachment location in the wake region of the air flow. The mean velocity deficit profile determined from these measurements at x = 20h compares quite well to a similarity solution profile obtained by Counihan, Hunt & Jackson (1974). Their analysis was extended in the present investigation to the concentration field. The similarity solution obtained for the mean concentration compares well to profiles measured at x = 12h, 15h, and 20h, up to about three obstacle heights above the wall.
引用
收藏
页码:127 / 167
页数:41
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Dispersion of a Passive Scalar Fluctuating Plume in a Turbulent Boundary Layer. Part II: Analytical Modelling
    Marro, Massimo
    Nironi, Chiara
    Salizzoni, Pietro
    Soulhac, Lionel
    [J]. BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2015, 156 (03) : 447 - 469
  • [22] Dispersion of a Passive Scalar Fluctuating Plume in a Turbulent Boundary Layer. Part II: Analytical Modelling
    Massimo Marro
    Chiara Nironi
    Pietro Salizzoni
    Lionel Soulhac
    [J]. Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 2015, 156 : 447 - 469
  • [23] DNS of a spatially developing turbulent boundary layer with passive scalar transport
    Li, Qiang
    Schlatter, Philipp
    Brandt, Luca
    Henningson, Dan S.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEAT AND FLUID FLOW, 2009, 30 (05) : 916 - 929
  • [24] Direct Numerical Simulation of a Turbulent Boundary Layer with Passive Scalar Transport
    Li, Qiang
    Schlatter, Philipp
    Brandt, Luca
    Henningson, Dan S.
    [J]. DIRECT AND LARGE-EDDY SIMULATION VII, 2010, 13 : 329 - 335
  • [25] Dispersion of a Passive Scalar Fluctuating Plume in a Turbulent Boundary Layer. Part I: Velocity and Concentration Measurements
    Nironi, Chiara
    Salizzoni, Pietro
    Marro, Massimo
    Mejean, Patrick
    Grosjean, Nathalie
    Soulhac, Lionel
    [J]. BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2015, 156 (03) : 415 - 446
  • [26] Dispersion of a Passive Scalar Fluctuating Plume in a Turbulent Boundary Layer. Part I: Velocity and Concentration Measurements
    Chiara Nironi
    Pietro Salizzoni
    Massimo Marro
    Patrick Mejean
    Nathalie Grosjean
    Lionel Soulhac
    [J]. Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 2015, 156 : 415 - 446
  • [27] Effect of spatially distributed wall concentration on the wall-flux of a passive scalar field in a laminar to turbulent transition boundary layer
    Harsude, Prakash
    Naik, Kethavath Naveen
    Chaudhury, Kaustav
    [J]. COMMUNICATIONS IN NONLINEAR SCIENCE AND NUMERICAL SIMULATION, 2021, 93
  • [28] High concentrations of a passive scalar in turbulent dispersion
    Mole, Nils
    Schopflocher, Thomas P.
    Sullivan, Paul J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 2008, 604 (447-474) : 447 - 474
  • [29] PASSIVE SCALAR DISPERSION AND MIXING IN A TURBULENT JET
    TONG, CN
    WARHAFT, Z
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 1995, 292 : 1 - 38
  • [30] Conditional correlation between a passive scalar and its dissipation in a turbulent boundary layer
    A. Benaissa
    J. Lemay
    F. Anselmet
    [J]. Experiments in Fluids, 1999, 26 : 488 - 496