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Combined effects of favourable pressure gradient and streamline curvature on uniformly sheared turbulence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2005

A. G. L. HOLLOWAY
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of New Brunswick, PO Box 4400 Fredericton, NB Canada E3B 5A3 [email protected]
D. C. ROACH
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of New Brunswick, PO Box 4400 Fredericton, NB Canada E3B 5A3 [email protected]
H. AKBARY
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of New Brunswick, PO Box 4400 Fredericton, NB Canada E3B 5A3 [email protected]

Abstract

The combined effects of favourable pressure gradient and streamline curvature were studied experimentally using an approximately homogeneous uniformly sheared turbulence. The shear flow was initially generated in a straight wind tunnel, where the turbulence was allowed to develop a fixed stress anisotropy, and then subsequently directed into a curved wind-tunnel test section. Streamwise pressure gradients were applied by convergence of the curved tunnel walls in the plane of the mean shear. In one set of experiments, convergence was applied in the first half of the curved test section, but not in the second half. In another set of experiments, the convergence was applied in the second half of the curved test section, but not in the first. This arrangement permitted the study of application and removal of streamwise pressure gradient to curved shear flow. Measurements showing the response of the turbulence stresses to the changing mean strain rates are reported and are consistent with previous studies which show that stabilizing curvature diminishes the turbulence energy and stresses. The addition of the streamwise strain rate associated with favourable pressure gradient was observed to have the effect of further diminishing the turbulence activity and its overall anisotropy. However, the important shear component of the anisotropy was increased above what it would be under the influence of curvature alone. The removal of streamwise strain rate caused the turbulence to recover a structure similar to that measured for uniformly curved shear flow; although this adjustment included an increase in the shear component of anisotropy prior to its gradual relaxation.

The principal direction of the Reynolds stress tensor was found to be closely related to the principal direction of the mean strain rate tensor in the present flows. This result was also found to be valid in the outer layer of accelerating curved boundary layers. A relationship between the direction of the principal mean strain rate and the mean flow curvature and streamwise strain rate was formulated to explain how each influences the state of turbulence stress.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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