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18 - Outlook and Open Research Issues

from SECTION D - FRONTIER FLOWS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2010

Fernando F. Grinstein
Affiliation:
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Len G. Margolin
Affiliation:
Los Alamos National Laboratory
William J. Rider
Affiliation:
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Summary

In this final section, we summarize the contributions to this book and briefly discuss new and open issues.

Précis

Our goal in this book has been to introduce a relatively new approach to modeling turbulent flows, which we term implicit large-eddy simulation (ILES). Simply stated, the technique consists of employing a fluid solver based on nonoscillatory finite volume (NFV) approximations and allowing the numerical truncation terms to replace an explicit turbulence model. NFV techniques have been a mainstream direction in the broader computational fluid dynamics community for more than 25 years, where they are known for their accuracy, efficiency, and general applicability. The application of NFV methods to turbulent flows has been more recent, but it already has produced quality results in a variety of fields.

Despite these computational advantages and simulation successes, the turbulence modeling community has been slow to accept the ILES approach. We hope to promote this acceptance by the present gathering of individual contributions of ILES pioneers and lead researchers, providing a consistent framework for and justification of this new approach.

There are several paths that contribute to the justification of the ILES approach to simulating turbulent flows. Practical demonstrations of capability are a necessary component, and they constitute the main content of this volume. Simulations in various chapters of this book, ranging from canonical flows with theoretical outcomes to more complex flows that have been investigated experimentally, serve to verify and validate the ILES approach. Further, these results show that ILES is competitive with classical large-eddy simulation (LES) approaches in terms of accuracywhile offering advantages in computational efficiency and ease of implementation.

Type
Chapter
Information
Implicit Large Eddy Simulation
Computing Turbulent Fluid Dynamics
, pp. 531 - 542
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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