1. Introduction
1.1. Turbulent boundary layers over fully rough walls
The transport of a fluid over a solid body or the transport of a solid body through a fluid is always hindered by friction forces acting on the interface between the solid and the fluid. Ideally, the solid surface is smooth, and the drag force is a purely viscous force. In nature and engineering applications, however, solid surfaces are nearly always rough. This means that, in addition to a modified viscous force, the roughness also results in a pressure contribution to the drag force (‘pressure drag’), and consequently, an increase in the total drag force (the so-called ‘drag penalty’). The contribution of the pressure drag to the total friction drag at the surface grows with increasing roughness height. Ultimately, when the pressure drag dominates, the surface is called hydrodynamically fully rough.
Owing to the obvious interest in reducing the drag penalty, substantial research has been carried out to investigate the effects of rough surfaces on wall-bounded turbulent flows (Jiménez Reference Jiménez2004; Flack & Schultz Reference Flack and Schultz2010; Chung et al. Reference Chung, Hutchins, Schultz and Flack2021). The key effect thereof is a downward shift (by $\Delta u^+$) of the mean streamwise velocity ($u^+$) in the overlap (or logarithmic) region of the turbulent boundary layer (BL) (Clauser Reference Clauser1954; Hama Reference Hama1954). This shift can be considered as a direct measure of the drag penalty. The mean velocity profile for a rough wall in the overlap region is given by the Prandtl–von Kármán profile for smooth walls, minus this shift (Pope Reference Pope2000)
where $y^+$ is the wall-normal distance, and the von Kármán constant $\kappa \approx 0.40$ and $A\approx 5.0$ are extracted from experimental or numerical data. The superscript ‘$+$’ indicates a normalization of the velocity $u$ with the viscous velocity scale $u_\tau = \sqrt {\tau _w/\rho }$ and of the wall-normal distance $y$ with the viscous length scale $\delta _\nu = \nu /u_\tau$, where $\tau _w$ is the wall shear stress, $\rho$ is the fluid density and $\nu$ is the kinematic viscosity. For a fully rough surface, it can be derived from dimensional arguments that the velocity shift $\Delta u^+$ depends logarithmically on the roughness height $k^+$, see e.g. Raupach, Antonia & Rajagopalan (Reference Raupach, Antonia and Rajagopalan1991) and Pope (Reference Pope2000). The so-called fully rough asymptote of the roughness function is given by
where $B\approx 8.5$ is the Nikuradse constant. The equivalent sand grain roughness height $k_s^+$ is obtained by fitting, such that the velocity shift of any fully rough surface collapses with the velocity shift of sand grains in turbulent pipe flow, which has historically grown to be the reference case (Nikuradse Reference Nikuradse1933). Hence, the key objective in research of wall bounded turbulent flows over rough surfaces is to relate the statistics of a rough surface to the value of $k_s$, which characterizes the roughness (Forooghi et al. Reference Forooghi, Stroh, Magagnato, Jakirlić and Frohnapfel2017).
1.2. Taylor–Couette flow
TC flow – the flow between two coaxial, independently, rotating cylinders – is a canonical system in turbulence (Taylor Reference Taylor1923; Grossmann, Lohse & Sun Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016). Because the domain is closed in all directions, global balances can be derived and monitored, which enables extensive comparison among theory, experiments and simulations. Moreover, the torque (corresponding to the skin friction) can be measured accurately and directly (van Gils et al. Reference van Gils, Huisman, Grossmann, Sun and Lohse2012; Huisman et al. Reference Huisman, van der Veen, Sun and Lohse2014), in contrast to measurements of skin friction in open systems.
The forcing strength of the system is quantified by the ratio of the centrifugal force and the viscous force, i.e. the Taylor number
Here, $\eta$ is the geometric measure of curvature, namely the ratio $r_i/r_o$ of the radii of the cylinders. The subscripts $i$ and $o$ indicate inner cylinder and outer cylinder, respectively. The angular velocity is denoted by $\omega$, and $\nu$ is the kinematic viscosity.
The global response of the system is expressed as the Nusselt number $Nu_\omega$, which is the ratio between the angular velocity flux $J^\omega$ in the radial direction and its laminar counterpart $J^\omega _{lam}$ (Eckhardt, Grossmann & Lohse Reference Eckhardt, Grossmann and Lohse2007), as
Here, $\langle \cdot \rangle _{A(r),t}$ denotes averaging over the cylinder surface $A(r)$ and over time $t$. The Nusselt number $Nu_\omega$ is related to the torque $\mathcal {T}$ required to drive the inner cylinder. In non-dimensional form, the torque can be expressed as
From here on, we assume inner cylinder rotation only, hence $\omega _o = 0$, as this corresponds to our experiments where we kept the (smooth) outer cylinder stationary at all times.
The torque is directly related to the wall shear stress $\tau _w = \mathcal {T}/(2 \pi r_i^2 L)$. As commonly used in other canonical systems (e.g. the flat-plate BL), we define the friction factor $C_f$ following Cheng, Pullin & Samtaney (Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020)
where $Re_i=r_i\omega _i d/\nu$, $Re_\tau = u_\tau d/(2\nu )$ and $d=r_o-r_i$.
The turbulent flow in the TC set-up is strongly influenced by the curvature of its bounding walls, i.e. the cylinders that drive the flow. This distinguishes turbulent TC flow from turbulent flows in other canonical systems. Bradshaw (Reference Bradshaw1969) realized that the effects of curvature on a turbulent BL are very similar to the effects of buoyancy stratification on a turbulent BL (Obukhov Reference Obukhov1971). In analogy to the Obukhov length (Obukhov Reference Obukhov1971; Monin & Yaglom Reference Monin and Yaglom1975), he derived a length scale that separates the curved BL in a region where the effects of shear dominate (i.e. production of turbulence is dominated by shear production), and a region further away from the wall where curvature effects dominate (i.e. the production of turbulence is dominated by curvature). For smooth wall TC turbulence, this ‘curvature Obukhov length’ is well approximated by Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020)
where shear dominates for $y \lesssim 0.20L_{c,s}$, shear and curvature effects are both significant for $0.20L_{c,s} \lesssim y \lesssim 0.65 L_{c,s}$, and curvature effects dominate at $0.65L_{c,s} \lesssim y$. Here, $y$ is the distance to the cylinder, which is $y=r-r_i$ for the inner cylinder BL and $y=r_o-r$ for the outer cylinder BL. For the derivation of $L_c^+$, we refer to § 3.1. Using data of the mean velocity profiles from PIV in turbulent TC flow (Huisman et al. Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013; van der Veen et al. Reference van der Veen, Huisman, Merbold, Harlander, Egbers, Lohse and Sun2016) and direct numerical simulations (DNS) (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco, Grossmann and Lohse2015), the mean angular logarithmic velocity profile in the region of the turbulent BL, where curvature effects are important, was recently obtained for smooth wall TC flow (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020). By employing a matching argument between the velocity profiles of the turbulent BL and the bulk region, following the work of Cheng et al. (Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020), an analytical expression for $Nu(Ta)$ was derived (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020).
The effects of irregular boundaries (extended transverse bars in the ‘obstacle regime’, as referred to by Jiménez (Reference Jiménez2004)) on turbulent TC flow were previously investigated by means of experiments (Cadot et al. Reference Cadot, Couder, Daerr, Douady and Tsinober1997; van den Berg et al. Reference van den Berg, Doering, Lohse and Lathrop2003; Verschoof et al. Reference Verschoof, Zhu, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018; Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verschoof, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018) and DNS (Zhu, Verzicco & Lohse Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017; Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verschoof, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018). The ratio $k/d$ between the height of the bars and the gap width $d=r_o-r_i$ was as large as $k/d = 0.05$ or even $0.1$. Later, Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Zhu, Chung, Verzicco, Stevens and Lohse2019) numerically studied the effects of sand grain roughness ($k/d = 0.019\text {--}0.087$) on the turbulent TC velocity profiles, and found similar transitionally rough behaviour as the sand grain roughness of Nikuradse (Reference Nikuradse1933) in turbulent pipe flow. However, we note that both the experimental and computational studies in TC flow suffered from a limited scale separation between the roughness scale $k$ and the gap width $d$.
In this paper, we study the effects of a hydrodynamically fully rough inner cylinder on the turbulent wall-bounded flow, with small roughness $k / d = 0.014$, where $k \equiv 6k_\sigma$, and $k_\sigma$ is the standard deviation of the roughness elevation, following Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016). In particular, we keep $k$ much smaller than the curvature Obukhov length $L_c$ (see (3.2)), namely $k/L_c = 0.078\text {--}0.090$. We will demonstrate that to study the effects of roughness on a turbulent flow in TC, $k\ll d$ is not enough. Rather, $k\ll L_c$ must also hold to ensure that effects related to the streamwise curved geometry are not influencing the effects of the roughness.
Hence, we hypothesize that effects of roughness in TC turbulence (where $k\ll L_c$) are similar to the effects of roughness in other canonical systems without streamwise curvature. Thus, global measurements in the (closed) TC facility can be employed to characterize drag properties of the rough surface. The outer cylinder remains smooth to allow for optical access of the velocity profiles.
The paper is organised as follows: In § 2, we describe the experimental methods. We then (§ 3) discuss the relevant dynamical length scales in the experiment, and elaborate on the different regions in the BL where turbulent production is dominated by shear effects and where effects related to the streamwise curvature of the set-up play a role. We also comment on the scale separation and show that the roughness mainly affects the inertial shear dominated regime, and hence, effects from the streamwise curved geometry of the TC flow do not modify the velocity shift. In § 4, we use the mean velocity profiles of the inner cylinder boundary layer to show that, apart from the shift, the velocity profiles for rough and smooth inner cylinders are the same. We use this in § 5 to calculate the angular velocity shift $\Delta \omega ^+$, from which the equivalent sand grain roughness height is determined in § 6. In § 7, we demonstrate that the bulk region of the flow is of constant angular momentum, which is used in § 8 to obtain a relation between the torque (skin-friction drag) and the Reynolds number for given surface roughness $k_s$, in agreement with our experimental results. The paper ends with a summary, conclusions and an outlook (§ 10).
2. Experimental set-up and methods
2.1. Experimental set-up
The experiments were performed in the Twente Turbulent Taylor–Couette (T$^3$C) facility (van Gils et al. Reference van Gils, Bruggert, Lathrop, Sun and Lohse2011a), with water as the working fluid. We used a fully rough inner cylinder with an outer radius of $r_i = 201.2$ mm, which consisted of a smooth inner cylinder with radius 200.0 mm and a support layer of the roughness with a thickness of 1.2 mm, and a transparent outer cylinder with an inner radius of $r_o = 279.4$ mm. This gave a radius ratio of $\eta =r_i/r_o=0.720$ and a gap width $d=r_o-r_i= 78.2$ mm for the rough wall cases. For the smooth wall calculations in § 8, we used $\eta =0.714$. The cylinders had a height of $L=927$ mm and an aspect ratio of $\varGamma = L/d = 11.9$. For inner cylinder rotation only (the outer cylinder is stationary), the Reynolds number, $Re_i$, is defined with the velocity of the inner cylinder, $r_i\omega _i$, and the gap width, $d$, as
Using the viscous velocity, $u_\tau$, which is obtained from torque measurements, the friction Reynolds number, $Re_\tau$, is defined as
The roughness used was P36 grit sandpaper (VSM, ceramic industrial grade), which was fixed to the entire surface of the inner cylinder using double-sided adhesive tape (tesa 51970). We define the characteristic length scale of the roughness as $k \equiv 6k_\sigma \approx 1.07$ mm (corresponding to the $99.8\,\%$ interval of the height), where $k_\sigma$ is the standard deviation of the local roughness height $h(x,y)$ (quantified using confocal microscopy (Bakhuis et al. Reference Bakhuis, Ezeta, Berghout, Bullee, Tai, Chung, Verzicco, Lohse, Huisman and Sun2020) on a square sample with sides of 25 mm from the rough sandpaper), and $k/d = 0.014$. For more details of the roughness height properties, see table 1 of Bakhuis et al. (Reference Bakhuis, Ezeta, Berghout, Bullee, Tai, Chung, Verzicco, Lohse, Huisman and Sun2020).
2.2. Experimental procedure
We performed seven experiments with different rotation rates of the inner cylinder, see table 1. During all these experiments, the torque $\mathcal {T}$ that is required to drive the inner cylinder at fixed rotational velocity was measured. The hollow reaction torque sensor that connects the drive shaft to the middle section of the inner cylinder is indicated in figure 1(a). By only measuring the torque on the middle section, possible end-plate effects were eliminated (van Gils et al. Reference van Gils, Huisman, Grossmann, Sun and Lohse2012). During the torque measurements, PIV was used to obtain the velocity field in the gap. To quantify the reproducibility of our torque measurements, we compared the torque data that were captured during the PIV experiments with three separate torque measurements thereafter. We found a spread in $\mathcal {T}$ of smaller than $4\,\%$ for all cases. These direct and reproducible measurements of the torque (friction) have an accuracy that is comparable to the measurement accuracy of wall shear stress in flat-plate BLs, by means of a drag balance (Baars et al. Reference Baars, Squire, Talluru, Abbassi, Hutchins and Marusic2016).
For the PIV measurements, fluorescent polymer tracer particles (Dantec FPP-RhB-10 1–20 $\mathrm {\mu }$m) were added to the working fluid. A horizontal laser sheet with a thickness of approximately 1 mm illuminated the tracer particles in the working liquid at mid-height, through the transparent outer cylinder. The laser sheet was created using a frequency doubled Quantel EverGreen 200 mJ laser. The fluorescent light emerging from the tracer particles was imaged from below, through a window in the bottom plate of the apparatus. For this, a $45\,^\circ$ mirror was positioned under the bottom plate as drawn schematically in figure 1. The camera was a high-resolution sCMOS camera (LaVision PCO.edge), with a resolution of $2560\ \text {px} \times 2160\ \text {px}$ and a pixel size of 6.5 $\mathrm {\mu }$m. A 100 mm focal length objective (Zeiss Makro Planar, 100 mm) was used, which gave an optical magnification of $0.17$.
For each rotational velocity of the inner cylinder, $10^4$ image pairs were acquired at a recording frequency equal to the rotation rate. The mean velocity distribution in the horizontal plane was computed using single-pixel ensemble correlation (Kähler, Scholz & Ortmanns Reference Kähler, Scholz and Ortmanns2006; Kähler, Scharnowski & Cierpka Reference Kähler, Scharnowski and Cierpka2012). The spatial resolution was 50 $\mathrm {\mu }$m, which led to approximately 1600 independent measurement points in the radial direction, evenly spread over the entire gap. From the correlation function (obtained for every pixel), one can directly extract the standard deviation of the velocity by integrating the probability density function $\sigma (u) = \int _{-\infty }^\infty (u-\langle u \rangle )^2 \,\text {PDF}(u)\,\textrm {d}u$, see Scharnowski, Hain & Kähler (Reference Scharnowski, Hain and Kähler2012). This ensures that all turbulent scales are included in the standard deviation, as opposed to regular PIV analysis. The velocity profiles were smoothed using a Gaussian filter with a standard deviation of $\sigma \approx 0.5$ mm.
3. Curvature effects, the mean velocity profile and scale separation
3.1. The relative effects of curvature and shear
To characterize and quantify the relative effects of shear and curvature in TC turbulence, we studied the ratio $S^{-1}$, which is the ratio of turbulence production by shear over turbulence production by curvature (Bradshaw Reference Bradshaw1969; Townsend Reference Townsend1976; Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020)
where $u'_\theta$ and $u'_r$ are the azimuthal and radial velocity fluctuations, respectively, and $\overline {u'_\theta u'_r}$ is the Reynolds stress. The mean azimuthal velocity is denoted by $U$ and $\omega = U/r$ is the mean angular velocity. The curvature Obukhov length $L_c$ defined in (1.7) for a smooth wall marks the transition from a region where the production of turbulence is dominated by shear ($y<0.20L_c$) to a region where it is affected by curvature ($y>0.20L_c$). The definition from (1.7) builds on the existence of a shear logarithmic region, where the gradient of the mean angular velocity is $({\textrm {d}}/{(\textrm {d}r)}) U = u_\tau /(\kappa y)$. Once we approximate the mean angular velocity with $\omega = \omega _i$, we find that for $S^{-1}=({u_\tau }/{(\kappa \omega _i y)})=1$, we have $y=L_c$. Physically this means that at a distance of $L_c$ from the wall, the shear and curvature production of turbulence are of equal magnitude. The angular velocity scale for rough walls is approximated as $\omega =\omega _i + \Delta \omega$. Thus, the generic curvature Obukhov length $L_c$ for smooth and rough walls can be defined with the inner cylinder rotation rate $\omega _i$ and the wall-shear stress $\tau _w$ only, similar to (1.7), but now for a rough wall,
so that $L_c^+(\Delta \omega ^+ = 0)=L_{c,s}^+$.
Figure 2(a) presents the compensated gradient of the mean angular velocity profile versus $S^{-1}$, calculated from the PIV results. We find fair collapse of the velocity gradients of the smooth (grey) and rough (coloured) wall profiles. When the effects of curvature are negligible $S^{-1} \ge {O}(10)$, the compensated gradient of the velocity profile approaches $\kappa ^{-1} \approx 2.5$. This occurs in a very small region close to the wall, where we cannot measure owing to the presence of the sandpaper roughness. For the rough and smooth wall velocity profiles, we find that the compensated gradient approaches $\lambda ^{-1}$ in the region where curvature and shear affect the flow. For $S^{-1}\le 1$, curvature effects dominate the flow, and a constant angular momentum region (i.e. the bulk flow) is established (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020).
3.2. The mean angular velocity profile
Figure 2(a) shows that the curvature- and shear-affected region of the BL contains a constant compensated gradient ($=\lambda ^{-1}$) of the mean angular velocity. From this observation, Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020) obtained an equation of the mean angular velocity in the shear- and curvature-affected region in the BL (in short ‘curvature log’).
The offset of the logarithmic velocity profile (with slope $\lambda ^{-1}$) in the curvature- and shear-affected region, as indicated in figure 3, is a function of the wall normal location where curvature-related effects impact the flow. From PIV results, the exact location was found to be $y^+=0.20L_c^+$, with $L_c^+$ defined in (3.2). Therefore, the offset is $\kappa ^{-1}\log 0.2L_c^+ + A$, where $A=5.0$ is the offset of the logarithmic velocity profile in the shear-affected region (Pope Reference Pope2000). The transition in the logarithmic velocity profile from the shear-affected region to the curvature- and shear-affected region at $y^+=0.20L_c^+$ is not sharp but gradual. To account for this, we introduce a constant $C_{bl}$ that connects the logarithmic velocity profiles of both regions. Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020) found that $A+C_{bl}+({1}/{\kappa } - {1}/{\lambda } )\log (0.2) =1.0$ for the inner cylinder, and the mean angular velocity equation above $y^+=0.20L_c^+$ as
with $C_{bl}=-3.30$. The transition from the curvature- and shear-affected region to the constant angular momentum region occurs at $y^+=0.65L_c^+$. We take this height as our definition of the boundary layer height, above which is the bulk region of constant angular momentum.
3.3. Scale separation
Key to the understanding of the effects of roughness in TC turbulence is the concept of scale separation. To illustrate this, in figure 2(b), we plot $S^{-1}$ versus the wall-normal distance $y/L_c = (r-r_i-2k_\sigma )/L_c$. We note that the wall offset (or zero plane displacement) $2k_\sigma ^+$ of the rough wall is an approximation. Because we focus on the flow region that is relatively far away from the wall, and $k_s/d \ll 1$, the choice of the zero plane displacement $h_v$ has negligible influence on the results, as far as $0< h_v< k$ (Raupach et al. Reference Raupach, Antonia and Rajagopalan1991; Squire et al. Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016). To quantify this, we set $h_v=0$ and $h_0=6k_\sigma$ (valley and peak of the roughness) and find that $\Delta \omega ^+$ only varies by $4\,\%$. As a reference, we also plot the smooth wall profile (grey) at $Ta=6.2\times 10^{12}$ (Huisman et al. Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013), together with the rough wall profiles (colours).
Table 1 presents the relevant dynamical length scales in the experiments: namely, $Re_\tau$, $L_c^+$ and $k_\sigma ^+$. The friction Reynolds number $Re_\tau$ from (2.2) gives the ratio of the largest dynamical length scale in the TC set-up to the viscous length scale $\delta _\nu$. Here, $Re_\tau$ is of the same order as in the smooth wall TC experiments by Huisman et al. (Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013), where it was $Re_\tau = 488\text {--}23\,093$, which is comparable to the rough BL experiments by Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016), where $Re_\tau = 2890\text {--}29\,900$.
The roughness scale in our experiments is much larger than the viscous length scale $\delta _\nu$, i.e. $k_\sigma ^+ = 34\text {--}127 \gg 1$ ($k_s^+ = 188\text {--}704 \gg 1$), and thus pressure drag dominates over viscous drag. For the flat-plate BL experiments of Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016) in the fully rough regime, we estimate that $k_\sigma ^+ = 9\text {--}12$ is required, based on the data for which $\Delta U^+ > 8.0$ in Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016). Hence, we are confident that we are indeed far in the fully rough regime. We also find that the roughness sublayer height $\approx (6-9)k_\sigma ^+$ (approximately $0.5$ times the roughness spacing Chung et al. Reference Chung, Hutchins, Schultz and Flack2021) is smaller than the outer bound of the shear dominated logarithmic region, $\approx 0.2L_c^+$. For the lowest roughness, we have $9k_\sigma ^+/0.2L_c^+=0.60$, and for the highest roughness, it is $9k_\sigma ^+/0.2L_c^+=0.66$. This separation of length scales allows for a region where the logarithmic velocity profile can form, albeit marginally. For example, in the smooth wall experiments of Huisman et al. (Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013), such a profile was found between $50 \le y^+ \le 600$ for comparable $Ta$. We finally find that the outer bound of the curvature dominated logarithmic region $L_c^+$ is smaller than the outer length scale $Re_\tau$, so that $0.65L_c^+/Re_\tau \approx 0.33$. For $y^+>0.65L_c^+$, the curvature dominated bulk, a constant angular momentum region forms. The occurrence and extent of this constant angular momentum region depends on the radius ratio $\eta$, i.e. $L_c^+/Re_\tau$ depends on $\eta$.
From table 1, we find that $\delta _\nu \ll k_\sigma < 0.20L_c$, hence the roughness only affects the inertial region where curvature effects are negligible. We therefore expect that the velocity shift of that region is similar to that of identical sandpaper in a flat-plate turbulent BL. Therefore, we would expect a fully rough asymptote with slope $\kappa ^{-1}$ and a similar value of $k_s$ as we would measure for identical sandpaper in a flat-plate turbulent BL.
4. Mean velocity profiles of the inner cylinder boundary layer
In this paper, we will show the angular velocity profile $\omega ^+(y^+)$ rather than the azimuthal velocity profile $u^+(y^+)$, as it is $\omega ^+(y^+)$ that is expected, given the arguments based on the Navier–Stokes equations, to have a logarithmic profile (Grossmann, Lohse & Sun Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2014).
Figure 4(a) shows the angular velocity profiles over the rough wall $\omega ^+ = \langle \omega _i - \omega (r)\rangle _t/\omega _{\tau }$, with $\omega _{\tau }=u_{\tau }/r_i$, versus the wall-normal coordinate $y^+$. In this and the next section, we focus our analysis on the mean velocity profiles of the inner cylinder BL, hence $u_\tau = u_{\tau ,i}$ throughout. In § 7, we will report on the bulk profiles. We refer to Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020) for an analysis of the smooth velocity profiles of the outer cylinder BL.
Figure 4(a) shows that with increasing viscous scaled roughness height, the rough wall profiles are increasingly shifted downwards, as expected. More importantly, we find from the diagnostic function $y^+({\textrm {d}\omega ^+}/{{\textrm {d} y}^+})$ (a useful representation of the compensated gradients (Pope Reference Pope2000)) in figure 4(b) that the slope $\lambda ^{-1}$ of the shear- and curvature-affected logarithmic region is the same for rough wall TC turbulence as for smooth wall TC turbulence (grey line). Unfortunately, we could not resolve the very thin spatial region where a shear-dominated logarithmic was found by Huisman et al. (Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013), as the roughness peaks obstruct the view for the PIV very close to the wall. Note that the range of $y^+/L_c^+$ in figure 4(b) is slightly shorter than in figure 5(a), because we employ a Gaussian smoothing before calculating the gradient of the velocity.
For a rough wall, $\Delta \omega ^+$ is a function of the equivalent sand grain roughness height $k_s^+$ and the curvature length $L_c$, so that $\Delta \omega ^+ (k_s^+, {k_s}/{L_c})$. When $k_s \ll L_c$, the angular velocity shift only depends on $k_s$, and the shift becomes $\Delta \omega ^+ (k_s^+)$. Because the inner cylinder rotates, the plus sign in the denominator of (3.2) is connected with the increase of angular fluid velocity in the inner cylinder BL owing to the roughness. When we normalize the wall-normal distance with $L_c^+$, we expect the transition from a curvature logarithmic velocity profile to the constant angular momentum bulk velocity profile to occur at $y^+/L_c^+ = 0.65$. In figure 4(b), we find a fair collapse of both smooth and rough wall profiles in the wall-normal direction, when normalized with curvature length $L_c^+$. The slopes of the curvature-affected logarithmic region of all profiles, rough and smooth, in the domain $0.20L_c^+ < y^+ < 0.65L_c^+$, fall in the range $\lambda = 0.60\text {--}0.65$.
5. The fully rough asymptote
From the observation that both smooth and rough wall velocity profiles possess the same slope $\lambda ^{-1}$ of the curvature logarithmic region (figure 4b), we proceed to calculate the angular velocity shift $\Delta \omega ^+$. The major advantage of the TC set-up is that the friction can be measured in a straightforward manner by measuring the torque. Hence, we can directly obtain the velocity shift by subtracting the rough velocity profile from the smooth velocity profile, rather than by means of fitting a velocity profile first to obtain $u_\tau$, e.g. the Clauser fit. Owing to the roughness, the angular velocity profiles in the shear logarithmic region are shifted, as discussed in § 3.1 and illustrated in figure 3. This shift remains also in the curvature logarithmic region, where we will now quantify it. The offset of that region scales with $({1}/{\kappa })\log (0.20L_{c}^+)+A$ (figure 3). Hence, it is imperative to calculate the angular velocity shift from the smooth wall velocity profile at matching $L_c^+$.
Figure 4(a) shows these smooth wall profiles (dashed), where the colours match the respective rough wall cases, and both $L_{c}^+$ and $Re_{\tau }$ are matched. The velocity shift $\Delta \omega ^+ (y^+)$ from the theoretical smooth wall profile, (3.3), is plotted in figure 5(a). The horizontal plateaus confirm the similarity of the slopes of the velocity profiles. We extract $\Delta \omega ^+$ at $y^+ \approx 0.4 L_c^+$ and plot the shift versus the roughness height in figure 5(b). When we fit a function of the form $\Delta \omega ^+ = ({1}/{a})\log k^+ + b$ through all seven data points, we obtain $a=0.34\pm 0.02$ to within $13\,\%$ of the von Kármán constant $\kappa = 0.39$, as measured in TC turbulence (Huisman et al. Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013) as the slope of the shear dominated logarithmic profile. This confirms our hypothesis, as discussed in § 3.1, where the fully rough asymptote for $\delta _\nu \ll k < L_c$ has slope $\kappa ^{-1}$. For reference, this is much higher than $\lambda ^{-1}\approx 0.64^{-1}$, blue line in figure 5(b).
To obtain a measure of the equivalent sand grain roughness height $k_s$, we fit the data points to the fully rough asymptote of Nikuradse (Reference Nikuradse1933), with $\kappa \approx 0.40$, which is in accordance with the value reported for the fully rough asymptote (Jiménez Reference Jiménez2004),
and obtain $k_s=5.54k_\sigma =0.97$ mm. For reference, the typical grain size is estimated by $6k_\sigma =1.05$ mm (Bakhuis et al. Reference Bakhuis, Ezeta, Berghout, Bullee, Tai, Chung, Verzicco, Lohse, Huisman and Sun2020).
6. The equivalent sand grain roughness height
The hypothesis in this research, postulated in § 3.1, is that the fully rough asymptote in TC turbulence with $\delta _\nu \ll k < L_c$ is the same (or very similar) to the fully rough asymptote in flows without streamwise curvature. We have already demonstrated in § 5 that the slope $\kappa ^{-1}$ of the fully rough asymptote is indeed (almost) the same. This leaves us with a comparison of the value of $k_s$ between TC turbulence and canonical systems without streamwise curvature.
In the literature, we have found two reports on turbulent flows over sandpaper roughness: the work of Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016), which employed 36 grit sandpaper in a turbulent BL, and Flack et al. (Reference Flack, Schultz and Connelly2007), who employed (12, 24, and 80) grit sandpaper in turbulent BL flow. In the rough wall TC experiments reported here, we used grit 36 sandpaper. However, it is essential to realize that sandpaper is not only defined by the grit size. Other statistics, such as the skewness (an important parameter (Forooghi et al. Reference Forooghi, Stroh, Magagnato, Jakirlić and Frohnapfel2017), which is 0.93 here and only 0.09 in the paper by Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016)), do vary with manufacturing methods. We have tried to use the very same sandpaper type (SP40F, Awuko Abrasives) as Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016). Unfortunately, the sandpaper turned out not to be waterproof, and detached from the inner cylinder. We then applied new water-resistant sandpaper (VSM, P36 grit ceramic industrial grade), with different surface roughness statistics.
To compare the drag property of the sandpaper surfaces in TC to the respective sandpaper surfaces in literature, we plotted the relationship between $k_s$ and the root-mean-square height and skewness in figure 6. The surface properties of the sandpaper surface from Flack et al. (Reference Flack, Schultz and Connelly2007) are taken from Flack & Schultz (Reference Flack and Schultz2010). The solid black line is the empirical correlation from Flack et al. (Reference Flack, Schultz and Barros2020). We find that the relation between $k_s$ and the skewness $Sk$ and the root-mean-square height $k_\sigma$ of the sandpaper used in our rough wall TC experiments is consistent with the empirical trend given for the sandpaper used in rough wall turbulent BL flow analysis. It was hypothesized by Chung et al. (Reference Chung, Hutchins, Schultz and Flack2021) that for fixed skewness, $k_s/k$ versus ES increases with increasing ES, exhibits a maximum, and then will decrease with further increasing ES. The results in figure 6 support this hypothesis. Whether the deviation originates from the difference between TC and canonical systems without curvature, or originates from the different surface statistics (e.g. the ES for the present surface is higher, which indicates a denser surface), remains to be resolved.
7. The constant angular momentum region in the bulk
Thus far, we have discussed the velocity profiles of the inner cylinder boundary layer, i.e. $y^+<0.65L_c^+$. By means of matching this profile to the bulk velocity profile at the boundary layer height, one can derive the relationship between the torque $Nu_\omega (Ta)$ and the velocity of the inner cylinder (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020; Cheng et al. Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020). For smooth wall inner cylinder rotating turbulent TC flow, it is well known that the angular momentum in the bulk ($M_b$) is constant (Wendt Reference Wendt1933; Townsend Reference Townsend1976), and, in fact, very close to half the inner cylinder angular momentum ($M_i=\omega _ir_i^2$), $M_b=0.5M_i$, for a stationary outer cylinder. For rough wall TC flow however, and especially for asymmetric roughness when the inner cylinder is of a different roughness height than the outer cylinder, the exact value of $M_b$ is a priori unknown. However, what was shown is that for very rough walls, the bulk azimuthal velocity profile is shifted towards the rough cylinder (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017, Reference Zhu, Verschoof, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018; Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Zhu, Chung, Verzicco, Stevens and Lohse2019).
If the bulk region velocity conforms to a constant angular momentum, it should match the angular momentum at the edge of the BL $r=r_i+\delta _r$, where $\delta _r=0.65L_c$. The momentum ratio ($M_b/M_i$) is the angular momentum in the bulk over the angular momentum of the inner cylinder
where $\omega |_{y=\delta _r} = \omega _{\tau ,i}(\omega _i^+ - \omega _r^+(y^+=\delta _r^+))$, and we use the velocity profile of the rough inner cylinder BL, figure 3 and (3.3), $\Delta \omega ^+$, $\omega _r^+(y^+=\delta _r^+) = ({1}/{\lambda })\log \delta _r^+ + ({1}/{\kappa }-{1}/{\lambda })\log L_{c,r}^+ + 1.0 - \Delta \omega ^+$. Figure 7 compares the result from (7.1) (dashed line) with the experimentally obtained velocity profiles (solid lines), which demonstrates agreement between the calculated and the measured profiles. This supports the assumption that the rough-wall velocity profiles also conform to a constant angular momentum in the bulk. Finally, we point out that the ‘undershooting’ and ‘overshooting’ of the profiles in the bulk, i.e. the slight increase in $M$ with increasing $r$, is likely an effect of the turbulent Taylor vortices, and is therefore expected to depend on the height coordinate $z$ (Huisman et al. Reference Huisman, van der Veen, Sun and Lohse2014). This arises from the detaching plumes which are transported to the other side of the gap by the Taylor rolls. Similar overshooting is well known from temperature profiles in turbulent Rayleigh–Bénard flow (Tilgner, Belmonte & Libchaber Reference Tilgner, Belmonte and Libchaber1993; Ahlers, Grossmann & Lohse Reference Ahlers, Grossmann and Lohse2009).
8. Calculation of $Nu_\omega (Ta)$ and $C_f(Re)$
Because the angular momentum in the bulk is, to a good approximation, constant, we can match the angular momentum of the inner cylinder BL at the BL height with the angular momentum of the outer cylinder BL at the BL height, i.e. $M(\delta _{i,r}) = M(\delta _{o,s})$. This approach is based on the matching of the BL and bulk velocity profiles in the recent CPS model (Cheng et al. Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020). Subscripts $(i,o)$ refer to inner cylinder and outer cylinder BL quantities, where subscripts $(s,r)$ refer to smooth and rough wall quantities, and $\delta =0.65L_c$ for the inner cylinder and outer cylinder (rough and smooth) so that $\delta _{i,r}^+=\alpha L_{c,i,r}^+$, $\delta _{o,s}^+=\alpha L_{c,o,s}^+$ with $\alpha = 0.65$. The matching argument becomes
where we realize that $\omega _{\tau ,o} = \eta ^2 \omega _{\tau ,i}$. We substitute the BL equations for respectively rough and smooth walls into (8.1) and obtain
The rough wall, inner cylinder BL height $\delta _{i,r}^+$ and the velocity shift $\Delta \omega ^+$ are functions of the sand grain size $k_s^+$. This makes the matching equation more involved, compared with the smooth wall case (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020; Cheng et al. Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020).
Following Cheng et al. (Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020), we now rewrite the equation in terms of $Re_{\tau ,i}$ and $Re_i$. The inner cylinder angular velocity becomes
The equivalent sand grand size is
The fully rough asymptote from (5.1) can now be rewritten as
The inner cylinder, rough wall, BL height $\delta _{i,r}^+$ is rewritten from $\delta _{i,r}^+=\alpha L_{c,i,r}^+$ as
The outer cylinder, smooth wall, BL height $\delta _{o,s}^+$ is rewritten from $\delta _{o,r}^+=\alpha L_{c,o,r}^+$ as
We can now substitute (8.3)–(8.7) into (8.2), and obtain
This implicit equation can be solved numerically to obtain $Re_{\tau ,i}(Re_i)$ with parameters $C_i = 1.0$, $C_o=2.0$, $A=5.0$, $B=8.5$, $\kappa =0.39$ (in accordance with Huisman et al. Reference Huisman, Scharnowski, Cierpka, Kähler, Lohse and Sun2013; Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020), $\lambda =0.64, \alpha =0.65$ for these experiments, $\eta =0.714$ and $\epsilon =2(0.9694/78.2)=0.024$. Finally, by means of (1.3)–(2.1), we express the result $Re_{\tau ,i}(Re_i)$ into $Nu_\omega (Ta)$ and $C_f(Re_i)$, respectively.
Figure 8 presents the final result, together with the experimental data from smooth walls (van Gils et al. Reference van Gils, Huisman, Bruggert, Sun and Lohse2011b) and with the equation for smooth wall TC (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020) (grey). The black open squares represent the fully rough inner cylinder rotating TC experiments presently. The black solid line is our calculation from (8.8). We emphasize that no fitting parameters were used. All parameters find their origin in the velocity profiles, and originate from the slopes of the logarithmic velocity profiles ($\kappa ^{-1}$, $\lambda ^{-1}$), the offset of the smooth velocity profile ($A, C_i, C_o$) or the BL thickness fit for smooth walls $\alpha$. This reflects that all parameters are universal for all radius ratios, and cannot and need not be ‘tuned’. Regarding the quantification of the accuracy and repeatability of the torque measurements, we carried out 6 individual time series measurements of the torque at a fixed $Re=0.99 \times 10^6$. We find that the mean standard deviation of the individual time series of the torque, binned over 1 min intervals, was $1.72$, which is larger than the error in the torque sensor typically expressed by manufacturers as a percentage of the maximum rated load. The maximum spread in the mean Nusselt numbers among the different measurements was $5.54$. Both numbers were smaller than the marker size in figure 8(a).
The agreement between (8.8) and the experimental data is convincing. The mean absolute error was only 4.9 %, and for the three highest Taylor numbers, the error was less than $2\,\%$. This implies that from straightforward measurements of the torque, for given inner cylinder rotation speed, we can calculate the value of $k_s$ with a reasonable accuracy. This means that the TC facility can potentially be used for direct and fast measurements of surface drag properties, as characterized by $k_s$.
9. Discussion
In the foregoing sections, we have shown that the TC set-up can be employed to study the drag of rough surfaces. In particular, we have investigated the necessary scale separation, the functional form of the velocity profiles and, from the velocity profiles, the calculation of $Nu_\omega (Ta)$. Here we address some final implications of the experiments and modelling ideas.
The calculation of $Nu_\omega (Ta)$ mostly follows the idea of matching velocity profiles of Cheng et al. (Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020). However, Cheng et al. (Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020) assumed that the bulk angular momentum is always $0.5$ times the inner cylinder angular momentum. In § 7, we have shown that this is not the case when the drag of the inner cylinder is different from the drag of the outer cylinder. Consequently, we matched the angular momentum of the IC BL with the bulk at the boundary layer height, and calculated the bulk angular momentum as a function of the roughness height (see figure 7 and (7.1)).
In § 5, we showed that the rough IC BL velocity profile follows, to a good approximation, the fully rough asymptote. Hence, we conclude that the turbulent flow occupies the fully rough regime. However, the friction factor $C_f$ does not exhibit fully rough behaviour, i.e. $C_f(Re_i)$ is not constant, see figure 8(b). This arises from the fact that only the IC is rough and the outer cylinder is still smooth. Much like the experiments of Zhu et al. (Reference Zhu, Verschoof, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018), who found that only when both cylinders are rough and pressure drag dominates viscous drag at both cylinders is $\tau _w \propto Re_i^2$, i.e. $C_f(Re_i)=\text {Constant}$. If both cylinders would be rough, we could modify the right hand side of (8.2) and match two rough angular momentum profiles. This is left for future research.
Finally, we note that a limit exists for which the modelling, as discussed in this paper, would no longer work. At that limit, the dispersive fluctuations of the rough wall are not constrained to the shear logarithmic region, i.e. $h_r/(0.20L_c)>1$ (with $h_r$ as the roughness sublayer height) and the flow enters the obstacle regime, see figure 9. However, we realize that this limit is far away in terms of $Re_\tau$, as $L_c/d\propto 1/\mathcal {Z}\propto 1/(Re_i/Re_\tau + \log (Re_\tau ))$. For the current system configuration, we calculate that $h_r>0.20L_c$ for $Re_\tau > {O}(10^7)$, with $h_r\approx 2.5k_s$, see Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Zhu, Chung, Verzicco, Stevens and Lohse2019). In fact, the obstacle regime might itself consist of two varying regimes. One where $0.20L_c< h_r< L_c$, and the roughness penetrates the curvature logarithmic region. Then a second regime where $h_r>L_c$ and the roughness penetrates the bulk.
10. Summary, conclusions and outlook
We conducted experiments of inner cylinder rotating (and stationary outer cylinder) Taylor–Couette (TC) turbulence with a rough inner cylinder and a smooth outer cylinder. We measured the torque and, by means of PIV, the mean angular velocity profiles. The rough surface consisted of P36 industrial grade sandpaper, where the roughness height $k=6k_\sigma$, with $k_\sigma$ as the standard deviation of the roughness height, over the gap width $d$ was $k/d=0.014$. The roughness height $k$ was much larger than the viscous length scale $\delta _\nu$, such that $k/\delta _\nu = 204\text {--}762$. The velocity shift of the rough wall angular velocity profiles, compared with the reference smooth wall, in the ‘log-law region’, was $\Delta \omega ^+ > 9$ over the whole range of $4.6\times 10^5 < Re_i < 1.77\times 10^6$. Hence, the sandpaper was hydrodynamically fully rough. Furthermore, the roughness height $k<0.090L_c$, where $0.20L_c$ is the height (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020) that separates the region in the BL where production of turbulence is dominated by shear from the region in the BL where production of turbulence is affected by streamwise curvature.
Using the mean azimuthal velocity profiles, we found that the slope of the fully rough asymptote, characterized by $\kappa = 0.34\pm 0.02$, was similar to previous findings in flat-plate BLs $\kappa \approx 0.38$. Also, the value of the equivalent sand grain roughness height $k_s$ compared reasonably well with those found for sandpaper in flat plate BLs (Flack et al. Reference Flack, Schultz and Connelly2007; Squire et al. Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016).
Finally, to obtain the relationship between the dimensionless torque and dimensionless driving of the system $Nu_\omega (Ta)$, we employed a matching argument between the inner cylinder BL rough mean angular momentum profile at the inner cylinder BL height, and the smooth outer cylinder BL mean angular momentum profile at the outer cylinder BL height, based on the CPS model of Cheng et al. (Reference Cheng, Pullin and Samtaney2020), see also Berghout et al. (Reference Berghout, Verzicco, Stevens, Lohse and Chung2020). To justify this, we first showed that for a rough wall inner cylinder, a region of constant angular momentum exists in the bulk. We find a convincing overlap between the calculated value of the torque (or wall shear stress), and the experimentally measured values of the torque, with a mean absolute error of $4.9\,\%$.
These findings indicate that the turbulent TC facility can be a valuable set-up for characterizing the turbulent drag properties of any rough surface. Direct and straightforward measurements of the torque can now be translated to a value of the equivalent sand grain roughness height $k_s$. It seems that the value of $k_s$ found in TC is similar to the value of $k_s$ found in flat-plate BLs.
As an outlook to future work, we propose that more studies in both turbulent flat-plate BLs and turbulent TC flow, with identical rough surfaces, are carried out to further compare the drag properties of these surfaces. Further unanswered questions include the effects of even more considerable roughness penetrating the curvature-affected logarithmic regime of the BL, which is related to finding the slope of the fully rough asymptote in that region. This could also be achieved by employing a TC set-up with a lower radius ratio $\eta$, thus increasing curvature effects.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank B. Benschop, M. Bos and G.W. Bruggert for their technical support, Y.A. Lee for his support in the lab, and M.A. Bruning for discussions. We also thank D. Pullin for his generous and profound comments on the manuscript.
Funding
This study was funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) through the Multiscale Catalytic Energy Conversion (MCEC) research center and the GasDrive project 14504, by the European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant ‘Droplet Diffusive Dynamics’, and by the Priority Programme SPP 1881 Turbulent Superstructures of the Deutsche Forschungs-gemeinschaft.
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflicts of interest.
Author contributions
P.B. and P.A.B. are joint first authors.
Appendix
In the manuscript, we have described the experimental difficulties that we encountered with the sandpaper surface of Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016) (‘Squire sandpaper’), i.e. the sandpaper detached from the inner cylinder at high $Re_i$. Nonetheless, we studied the torque data of the one successful experiment that was done before the sandpaper surface ruptured from the inner cylinder, and did not include a PIV measurement. From this torque data, which comes from just one experiment, we can, by means of (8.8), calculate the value of $k_s$. We are cautious in doing so. First, the torque is obtained from one experiment only. Second, for the Squire sandpaper, we did not measure the velocity profiles that would directly give us $k_s$ and would inevitably be more precise. Nonetheless, we show in figure 10(a) the fit of the (8.8) from the manuscript with the torque data of the Squire sandpaper surface. The fit gives $k_s=1.30$ mm. In figure 10(b), we plot $k_s/k_{rms}$ versus the skewness for all sandpaper surfaces. We find that $k_s/k_{rms}$ is indeed higher for the Squire sandpaper surface as measured in TC (where we take the skewness value from Squire et al. Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016), as compared to the sandpaper surface that we employ in the rest of our experiments (VSM, ceramic industrial grade), despite the lower skewness for the Squire sandpaper. Also, we find that the value of $k_s$ is rather close to that of Squire et al. (Reference Squire, Morrill-Winter, Hutchins, Schultz, Klewicki and Marusic2016).
In the end, the conclusion of the paper remains the same. We have shown the existence of a fully rough asymptote in TC turbulence and how to calculate the value of $k_s$ from the torque data. The value of $k_s$ as measured in TC appears to be similar to that of $k_s$ measured in BL turbulence for identical surfaces. However, only more careful and structured experimental work with all kinds of surfaces can answer whether the values of $k_s$ for the different systems will ultimately be the same for identical surfaces, or whether differences remain.