Topology-based characterization of compressibility effects in mixing layers Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Direct numerical simulations of high-speed mixing layers are used to characterize the effects of compressibility on the basis of local streamline topology and vortical structure. Temporal simulations of the mixing layers are performed using a finite volume gas-kinetic scheme for convective Mach numbers ranging from $M_{c}=0.2$ to $M_{c}=1.2$. The focus of the study is on the transient development and the main objectives are to (i) investigate and characterize the turbulence suppression mechanism conditioned upon local streamline topology; and (ii) examine changes in the vortex vector field distribution, magnitude and orientation as a function of Mach number. We first reaffirm that kinetic energy suppression with increasing Mach number is due to a decrease in pressurestrain redistribution. Then, we examine the suppression mechanism conditioned upon topology and vortex structure. Conditional statistics indicate that (i) at a given Mach number, shear-dominated topologies generally exhibit more effective pressurestrain redistribution than vortical topologies; and (ii) for a given topology, the level of pressurestrain correlation mostly decreases with increasing Mach number. At each topology, with increasing Mach number, there is a corresponding decrease in turbulent shear stress and production leading to reduced kinetic energy. Further, as $M_{c}$ increases, the proportion of vortex-dominated regions in the flow increases, leading to further reduction in the turbulent kinetic energy of the flow. Then, the orientation of vortical structures and direction of fluid rotation are examined using the vortex vector approach of Tian etal.(J. Fluid Mech., vol. 849, 2018, pp. 312339). At higher $M_{c}$, the vortex vectors tend to be more aligned in the streamwise direction in contrast to low $M_{c}$ wherein larger angles with streamwise direction are preferred. The connection between vortex orientation and kinetic energy production is also investigated. The findings lead to improved insight into turbulence suppression dynamics in high Mach number turbulent flows.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS

altmetric score

  • 0.25

author list (cited authors)

  • Arun, S., Sameen, A., Srinivasan, B., & Girimaji, S. S.

citation count

  • 12

complete list of authors

  • Arun, S||Sameen, A||Srinivasan, B||Girimaji, SS

publication date

  • September 2019