Direct numerical simulation of turbulent flow and mass transfer around a rotating circular cylinder


Autoria(s): Hwang, J. Y.; Yang, K.; Bremhorst, K.
Contribuinte(s)

ASME

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Turbulent flow around a rotating circular cylinder has numerous applications including wall shear stress and mass-transfer measurement related to the corrosion studies. It is also of interest in the context of flow over convex surfaces where standard turbulence models perform poorly. The main purpose of this paper is to elucidate the basic turbulence mechanism around a rotating cylinder at low Reynolds numbers to provide a better understanding of flow fundamentals. Direct numerical simulation (DNS) has been performed in a reference frame rotating at constant angular velocity with the cylinder. The governing equations are discretized by using a finite-volume method. As for fully developed channel, pipe, and boundary layer flows, a laminar sublayer, buffer layer, and logarithmic outer region were observed. The level of mean velocity is lower in the buffer and outer regions but the logarithmic region still has a slope equal to the inverse of the von Karman constant. Instantaneous flow visualization revealed that the turbulence length scale typically decreases as the Reynolds number increases. Wavelet analysis provided some insight into the dependence of structural characteristics on wave number. The budget of the turbulent kinetic energy was computed and found to be similar to that in plane channel flow as well as in pipe and zero pressure gradient boundary layer flows. Coriolis effects show as an equivalent production for the azimuthal and radial velocity fluctuations leading to their ratio being lowered relative to similar nonrotating boundary layer flows.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:102303

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

ASME

Palavras-Chave #Engineering, Mechanical #rotating circular cylinder #turbulence #direct numerical simulation #Channel Flow #Wavelet Transforms #Erosion-corrosion #Stepped Cylinder #Disturbed Flow #Electrode #Pressure #Signal #E1 #291803 Turbulent Flows #780103 Chemical sciences
Tipo

Conference Paper