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Entrainment vortices and interfacial intermittent turbulent bulges in a plane turbulent wake

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2002

GREGORY A. KOPP
Affiliation:
Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel Laboratory, Faculty of Engineering, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, N6A 5B9, Canada
FRANCESC GIRALT
Affiliation:
Department d'Enginyeria Química, ETSEQ, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Campus Sescelades, Av. dels Països Catalans, 26, 43007 Tarragona, Catalunya, Spain
JAMES F. KEFFER
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Toronto, 5 King's College Road, Toronto. Ontario, M5S 1A4, Canada

Abstract

Hot-wire measurements were made simultaneously in two homogeneous ‘horizontal’ planes in the far-wake region of a cylinder. A technique developed using hot-wire data to identify the spatial characteristics of the large-scale bulges at the interface between the internal turbulent motions and the external irrotational flow was used to unambiguously relate these outer intermittent bulges to the inner coherent structures. It was found that a turbulent bulge is made up of a combination of a horseshoe vortex (whose legs form one double-roller eddy) and the straining region present just upstream of this structure. The approach also allowed the evaluation of the two most prominent phenomenological models for the entrainment mechanism in the far-wake region: the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability and Townsend's growth–decay cycle. It was found that the decaying and re-forming of the bulges and entrainment structures is not likely to occur. Rather, the evidence is that the large-scale bulges remain coherent for long streamwise distances in equilibrium with the overall similarity of the flow.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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