TTH
TTH
TTH
2704 Phys. Fluids 9 (9), September 1997 1070-6631/97/9(9)/2704/12/$10.00 © 1997 American Institute of Physics
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®nite-volume type solver is therefore unnecessary. In addi- where «s 5n^v8i v8i& is the standard solenoidal dissipation,
tion, models have been derived from existing Reynolds and «d 54/3n^u 8i, i 2& is the so-called dilatation
stress closures to account for the compressible dissipation dissipation, which is clearly zero in incompressible ¯ows,
and the pressure±dilatation correlation. and strictly positive in compressible ¯ows, thus amounting to
In section II we review some general effects of com- extra dis-sipation. We see that in ~1! three explicit terms
pressibility on turbulent ¯ows, as well as second-order clo- arising from compressibility need to be modelled: «d , Pd ,
sures from which our PDF formulation is inspired. It is em- and the last term, which arises because the Reynolds
phasized that the purpose of this work is neither to develop averages ^u 9i& of Favre ¯uctuations are nonzero. The last
new models for compressibility effects on turbulence, nor to term is probably very small in ¯ows without large pressure
test existing models, but to develop an innovative and con- gradients and away from walls. We therefore choose to
sistent PDF formulation designed for high-speed combus- neglect it. We need, however, to model the other two.
tion. In section III we detail the PDF formulation which is For the dilatation dissipation, we use the model of
the object of this work, summarizing brie¯y the general idea Sarkar et al.11 relating «d to «s in the following way:
behind PDF methods, then de®ning our stochastic variables
and the corresponding stochastic differential equations «d 5C d M t2 «s , ~2!
~SDE!. In section IV we present results for homogeneous 2 Ä2 Ä
where M t 52 k / a is the turbulent Mach number squared, a
¯ows. In section V, we extend the model to inhomogeneous
being the mean speed of sound. This model was developed
¯ows. At this point a comparison is made between model
for M t !1. The constant C d is of order 1. Equation ~2!
results and experimental data in the supersonic mixing layer
relates the dilatation dissipation to the solenoidal dissipation.
case.
It has been argued11,14 that the energy cascade responsible
for the latter is moderately affected by compressibility,
II. MODELS FOR THE EFFECTS OF
therefore standard incompressible models for the solenoidal
COMPRESSIBILITY ON TURBULENCE dissipa-tion can be used in the present situation.
In compressible reacting ¯ows, density variations arise For the pressure dilatation, we use Zeman's model,15
because of variations in chemical composition, and of tem- which can be summarized in the following two equations:
perature and pressure ¯uctuations. While all these effects 1 D ^ p 8 2&
contribute to create nonzero dilatation rates, only the latter Pd 52 , ~3!
are termed compressibility effects. In the following discus- 2 g^p& Dt
sion, we consider an inert ¯ow and therefore ignore the ef- D ^ p 8 2& ^ p 8 2 &2 p e 2
fects of a chemical reaction on the density. 52 . ~4!
Consider the equation for turbulent kinetic energy in Dt ta
compressible ¯ow: The ®rst equation is valid in homogeneous turbulence for M t
!1, and for high Reynolds and PeÂclet numbers. The sec-ond
]k Ä ]k ] ^ p& equation is fully modelled, relying on the results of Sarkar et
5T 1 P 1P
S ]x i
^r& 2^r&«2^u 9 &
i]x
1^r&U
Pd 5 K p8
]x i
]u 8i L encountered values of M t above 0.5, which has been consid-
ered to fall within the range of applicability of these models.
The above discussion is centered exclusively on model-
ling from the point of view of the turbulent kinetic energy
is the trace of the pressure-rate of strain correlation, also
equation, and not from the Reynolds stresses equation. The
called pressure dilatation, and « is the viscous dissipation.
models we have chosen will affect the turbulence in an iso-
In ~1!, the brackets correspond to Reynolds averages and the
primes to ¯uctuations about these averages, while the tildes tropic manner. Though it is known at this point 19,10 that com-
and double primes stand for Favre averages and ¯uctuations, pressibility also, and probably chie¯y, affects the turbulence
by modifying the deviatoric pressure-rate of strain correla-
respectively. It has been shown11,14 that the viscous dissipa-
tion so that the redistribution of energy does not function as
tion can be split into two terms:
well when the compressibility level is high, resulting in in-
«5«s 1«d , creased anisotropies in the normal stresses and decreased an-
Phys. Fluids, Vol. 9, No. 9, September 1997 B. J. Delarue and S. B. Pope 2705
Downloaded 22 Sep 2004 to 140.121.120.39. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright, see http://pof.aip.org/pof/copyright.jsp
FDA 95-05, Cornell University, 1995.
6
W. Kollmann, ``The pdf approach to turbulent ¯ow,'' Theor. Comput. Fluid Dyn. 1, 249
4 ~1990!.
A. W. Vreman, N. D. Sandham, and K. H. Luo, ``Compressible mixing layer growth rate
and turbulence characteristics,'' J. Fluid Mech. 320, 235 ~1996!.
B. J. Delarue and S. B. Pope
5
Jayesh and S. B. Pope, ``Stochastic model for turbulent frequency,'' Tech-nical report,
Downloaded 22 Sep 2004 to 140.121.120.39. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright, see http://pof.aip.org/pof/copyright.jsp
33 36
K. N. C. Bray, P. A. Libby, and F. A. Williams, ``High speed turbulent combustion,'' S. B. Pope, ``Position, velocity and pressure correction algorithm for par-ticle method
in Turbulent Reacting Flows, edited by P. A. Libby ~Aca-demic, New York, 1994!, solution of the pdf transport equations,'' Technical report, FDA 95-06, Cornell University,
Chap 10. 1995.
34 37
D. W. Bogdanoff, ``Compressibility effects in turbulent shear layers,'' AIAA J. 21, 926
D. C. Haworth and S. B. Pope, ``A generalized Langevin model for tur-bulent
¯ows,'' Phys. Fluids 29, 387 ~1986!. ~1983!.
35 38
G. L. Brown and A. Roshko, ``On density effects and large structures in turbulent mixing
S. B. Pope, ``On the relationship between stochastic Lagrangian models of
turbulence and second-moment closures,'' Phys. Fluids 6, 973 ~1994!. layers,'' J. Fluid Mech. 64, 775 ~1974!.
Phys. Fluids, Vol. 9, No. 9, September 1997 B. J. Delarue and S. B. Pope 2715
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