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1.
Detailed Laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV) measurements have been carried out in a turbulent rectangular channel flow with one rough wall. The roughness elements of two-dimensional spanwise 120° V-shaped grooves are periodically arranged with different depths and pitches. The Reynolds number based on the centerline velocity, and the channel half height ranges from 2,740 to 20,000. The comparisons of turbulence statistics over smooth and rough walls indicate that the present roughness leads to a significant change in the turbulence both in the inner and in the outer flow. Particularly, the distribution density of the grooves is a key parameter to evaluate the effect of roughness. The low-Reynolds-number dependence of turbulence statistics is also observed. The rough walls with the same pitch-to-depth ratio exhibit the equivalent roughness function under the corresponding Reynolds numbers. The disagreement of velocity defect profiles between smooth and rough walls challenges the defect universal law. The variations of the turbulence stresses and Reynolds shear stress decomposition in the outer layer suggest that the turbulent motions may be modified by the present grooves. The importance of sweep events for the present groove-roughened walls is reflected by the differences in relative contribution to Reynolds shear stress from each quadrant and the higher-order moments over smooth and rough walls.  相似文献   

2.
The mean velocity field and skin friction characteristics of a plane turbulent wall jet on a smooth and a fully rough surface were studied using Particle Image Velocimetry. The Reynolds number based on the slot height and the exit velocity of the jet was Re = 13,400 and the nominal size of the roughness was k = 0.44 mm. For this Reynolds number and size of roughness element, the flow was in the fully rough regime. The surface roughness results in a distinct change in the shape of the mean velocity profile when scaled in outer coordinates, i.e. using the maximum velocity and outer half-width as the relevant velocity and length scales, respectively. Using inner coordinates, the mean velocity in the lower region of the inner layer was consistent with a logarithmic profile which characterizes the overlap region of a turbulent boundary layer; for the rough wall case, the velocity profile was shifted downward due to the enhanced wall shear stress. For the fully rough flow, the decay rate of the maximum velocity of the wall jet is increased, and the skin friction coefficient is much larger than for the smooth wall case. The inner layer is also thicker for the rough wall case. The effects of surface roughness were observed to penetrate into the outer layer and slightly enhance the spread rate for the outer half-width, which was not observed in most other studies of transitionally rough wall jet flows.  相似文献   

3.
Previous work by the authors (Flack and Schultz, 2010) has identified the root-mean-square roughness height, krms, and the skewness, Sk, of the surface elevation distribution as important parameters in scaling the skin-friction drag on rough surfaces. In this study, three surfaces are tested in turbulent boundary layer flow at a friction Reynolds number, Reτ = 1600–2200. All the surfaces have similar root-mean-square roughness height, while the skewness is varied. Measurements are presented using both two-component LDV and PIV. The results show the anticipated trend of increasing skin-friction drag with increasing skewness. The largest increase in drag occurs going from negative skewness to zero skewness with a more modest increase going from zero to positive skewness. Some differences in the mean velocity and Reynolds stress profiles are observed for the three surfaces. However, these differences are confined to a region close to the rough surface, and the mean velocity and Reynolds stress profiles collapse away from the wall when scaled in outer variables. The turbulence structure as documented through two-point spatial correlations of velocity is also observed to be very similar over the three surfaces. These results support Townsend’s (1976) concept of outer-layer similarity that the wall boundary condition exerts no direct influence on the turbulence structure away from the wall except in setting the velocity and length scales for the outer layer.  相似文献   

4.
Large Eddy Simulations (LES) are carried out to investigate on the mean flow in turbulent channel flows over irregular rough surfaces. Here the attention is focused to selectively investigate on the effect induced by crests or cavities of the roughness. The irregular shape is generated through the super-imposition of sinusoidal functions having random amplitude and four different wave-lengths. The irregular roughness profile is reproduced along the spanwise direction in order to obtain a 2D rough shape. The analysis of the mean velocity profiles shows that roughness crests induce higher effect in the outer-region whereas roughness cavities cause the highest effects in the inner-region with a reduced effect in the external region. The numerical simulations have been carried out at friction Reynolds number Reτ=395. Similar results have been found for the higher order statistics: turbulence intensities or shear stresses. The analysis of the Reynolds stress anisotropy tensor confirms the existence of specific roles of cavities and crests in the turbulence modulation.  相似文献   

5.
Surface roughness effects in turbulent boundary layers   总被引:7,自引:7,他引:0  
The effects of surface roughness on a turbulent boundary layer are investigated by comparing measurements over two rough walls with measurements from a smooth wall boundary layer. The two rough surfaces have very different surface geometries although designed to produce the same roughness function, i.e. to have nominally the same effect on the mean velocity profile. Different turbulent transport characteristics are observed for the rough surfaces. Substantial effects on the stresses occur throughout the layer showing that the roughness effects are not confined to the wall region. The turbulent energy production and the turbulent diffusion are significantly different between the two rough surfaces, the diffusion having opposite sign in the region γ/δ < 0.5. Although velocity spectra exhibit differences between the three surfaces, the mean energy dissipation rate does not appear to be significantly affected by the roughness. Received: 19 August 1998/Accepted: 16 February 1999  相似文献   

6.
粗糙表面的分形特征与分形表达研究   总被引:79,自引:14,他引:79  
得用触针轮廓仪和数据采集系统对磨削和车削表面的粗糙轮廓曲线进行了测量,并就粗糙表面的分形特征作了分析与讨论,同时还提出了粗糙表面的特征粗糙度概念及其定义,并将其用表面粗糙度水平的表述。  相似文献   

7.
Velocity profile measurements in zero pressure gradient, turbulent boundary layer flow were made on a smooth wall and on two types of rough walls with a wide range of roughness heights. The ratio of the boundary layer thickness (δ) to the roughness height (k) was 16≤δ/k≤110 in the present study, while the ratio of δ to the equivalent sand roughness height (k s) ranged from 6≤δ/k s≤91. The results show that the mean velocity profiles for all the test surfaces agree within experimental uncertainty in velocity-defect form in the overlap and outer layer when normalized by the friction velocity obtained using two different methods. The velocity-defect profiles also agree when normalized with the velocity scale proposed by Zagarola and Smits (J Fluid Mech 373:33–70, 1998). The results provide evidence that roughness effects on the mean flow are confined to the inner layer, and outer layer similarity of the mean velocity profile applies even for relatively large roughness.  相似文献   

8.
A numerical investigation is carried out to study the transition of a subsonic boundary layer on a flat plate with roughness elements distributed over the entire surface. Post-transition, the effect of surface roughness on a spatially developing turbulent boundary layer (TBL) is explored. In the transitional regime, the onset of flow transition predicted by the current simulations is in agreement with the experimentally based correlations proposed in the literature. Transition mechanisms are shown to change significantly with the increasing roughness height. Roughness elements that are inside the boundary layer create an elevated shear layer and alternating high and low speed streaks near the wall. Secondary sinuous instabilities on the streaks destabilize the shear layer promoting transition to turbulence. For the roughness topology considered, it is observed that the instability wavelengths are governed by the streamwise and spanwise spacing between the roughness elements. In contrast, the roughness elements that are higher than the boundary layer create turbulent wakes in their lee. The scale of instability is much shorter and transition occurs due to the shedding from the obstacles. Post-transition, in the spatially developing TBL, the velocity defect profiles for both the smooth and rough walls collapsed when non dimensionalized in the outer units. However, when compared to the smooth wall, deviation in the Reynolds stresses are observable in the outer layer; the deviation being higher for the larger roughness elements.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of rough surface topography on heat and momentum transfer is studied by direct numerical simulations of turbulent heat transfer over uniformly heated three-dimensional irregular rough surfaces, where the effective slope and skewness values are systematically varied while maintaining a fixed root-mean-square roughness. The friction Reynolds number is fixed at 450, and the temperature is treated as a passive scalar with a Prandtl number of unity. Both the skin friction coefficient and Stanton number are enhanced by the wall roughness. However, the Reynolds analogy factor for the rough surface is lower than that for the smooth surface. The semi-analytical expression for the Reynolds analogy factor suggests that the Reynolds analogy factor is related to the skin friction coefficient and the difference between the temperature and velocity roughness functions, and the Reynolds analogy factor for the present rough surfaces is found to be predicted solely based on the equivalent sand-grain roughness. This suggests that the relationship between the Reynolds analogy factor and the equivalent sand-grain roughness is not affected by the effective slope and skewness values. Analysis of the heat and momentum transfer mechanisms based on the spatial- and time-averaged equations suggests that two factors decrease the Reynolds analogy factor. One is the increased effective Prandtl number within the rough surface in which the momentum diffusivity due to the combined effects of turbulence and dispersion is larger than the corresponding thermal diffusivity. The other is the significant increase in the pressure drag force term above the mean roughness height.  相似文献   

10.
The wind tunnel simulations of wind loading on a solid structure of revolution with one smooth and five rough surfaces were conducted using wind tunnel tests. Timemean and fluctuating pressure distributions on the surface were obtained, and the relationships between the roughness Reynolds number and pressure distributions were analyzed and discussed. The results show that increasing the surface roughness can significantly affect the pressure distribution, and the roughness Reynolds numbers play an important role in the change of flow patterns. The three flow patterns of subcritical, critical and supercritical flows can be classified based on the changing patterns of both the mean and the fluctuating pressure distributions. The present study suggests that the wind tunnel results obtained in the supercritical pattern reflect more closely those of full-scale solid structure of revolution at the designed wind speed.  相似文献   

11.
A 2-D turbulent boundary layer experiment with zero pressure gradient (ZPG) has been carried out over a rough and a smooth surface using two cross hot-wire probes. Wind tunnel speeds of 10 m/s and 20 m/s were set up in order to investigate the effects of the upstream conditions and the Reynolds number on the downstream flow. For a given set of upstream conditions, such as the wind tunnel speed, trip wire size and location, the three components of the velocity field were measured from about 14 m from the inlet of the wind tunnel to 30 m downstream. This experiment is unique because it achieves Reynolds numbers as high as R120,000, for which measurements of the mean velocity are reported. It is shown that by fixing the upstream conditions, the mean deficit profiles collapse with the freestream velocity, , but to different curves depending on the upstream conditions and surface roughness. Moreover, the effects of the upstream conditions, the Reynolds number, and roughness are completely removed from the outer flow when the mean deficit profiles are normalized by the Zagarola/Smits scaling, . Consequently, the true asymptotic profile in the turbulent boundary layer is found in ZPG flow regardless of the range of Reynolds number, surface conditions and initial conditions.  相似文献   

12.
Roughness wall effects in a zero pressure gradient turbulent boundary layers were investigated using hot-wire anemometry. The skewness and diffusion factors of u and v, the longitudinal and normal velocity fluctuations, were measured and represented using wall variables. The results indicate that the wall roughness removes the crossover point between sweep and ejection events to the outer region of the layer for a single Reynolds number Re θ  > 3,000. This behaviour exhibits that the roughness surface favours the maintaining of sweep events obtained by a quadrant analysis. These results show that communication between the wall region and outer region of a turbulent boundary layer exists and the wall similarity hypothesis for a rough wall is questionable. The effect of the wall roughness on the position of the point crossover from sweep to ejection motions with respect to the wall seems to be the same as that obtained when the Reynolds number is higher. Received: 8 March 2000/Accepted: 15 May 2000  相似文献   

13.
A laser anemometer has been used to study the region of accelerating shear flow near the exit of a vertical tube. It is in this region that the transition between steady laminar shear flow in the upstream tube and elongational flow in the downstream liquid jet takes place.Downstream velocity profiles were measured for solutions of 0.9% polyacrylamide in 85% glycerol/water and 0.9% polyacrylamide in water. Reynolds numbers (based on wall conditions in the fully developed upstream flow) ranged from 45 to 310 and Froude numbers from 0.294 to 4.11. Tubes, having sharpedged and rounded exit corners, with diameters of 1.25 cm and 1.90 cm were usedUpstream velocity profiles were measured for a solution of 0.9% polyacrylamide in water. Reynolds numbers ranged from 16 to 670. Only tubes having sharp-edged exit corners were used.It was found that the transition region did not extend upstream into the tube but was confined to the downstream jet. The transition took place over a distance of about 3–5 tube diameters depending upon the value of the Froude number. The axial distance downstream from the tube exit plane at which the velocity profile first became flat increased with increasing Froude number. The magnitude of the jet velocity at this point decreased with increasing Froude number.The condition of the tube exit corner was found to influence the flow in the transition region. Downstream velocity profiles obtained using tubes having rounded exit corners initially develop more slowly than, but soon catch up with and eventually overtake, the corresponding profiles obtained using tubes with sharp-edged exit corners.Downstream velocity profiles obtained for the 0.9% polyacrylamide in 85% glycerol/water solution were found to develop smoothly. The transition from steady shear flow in the tube to elongational flow in the jet took place through the combined processes of acceleration of the outer layers of the jet due to radial transfer of momentum with adjacent inner layers, the process spreading steadily inwards with increasing axial distance from the tube exit plane, and acceleration of the whole due to gravity. However, the velocity profiles obtained for the 0.9% polyacrylamide in water solution did not always develop so smoothly. At a Reynolds number of 310 and Froude number of 2.06 the radial momentum transfer process was restricted to a narrow outer region of the jet until a downstream axial distance of about 2 tube diameters was reached. Thereafter, the transition to a flat profile took place smoothly.  相似文献   

14.
Outer layer similarity in fully rough turbulent boundary layers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Turbulent boundary layer measurements were made on a flat plate covered with uniform spheres and also on the same surface with the addition of a finer-scale grit roughness. The measurements were carried out in a closed return water tunnel, over a momentum thickness Reynolds number (Re) range of 3,000–15,000, using a two-component, laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV). The results show that the mean profiles for all the surfaces collapse well in velocity defect form. Using the maximum peak to trough height (Rt) as the roughness length scale (k), the roughness functions (U+) for both surfaces collapse, indicating that roughness texture has no effect on U+. The Reynolds stresses for the two rough surfaces also show good agreement throughout the entire boundary layer and collapse with smooth wall results outside of the roughness sublayer. Quadrant analysis and the velocity triple products show changes in the rough wall boundary layers that are confined to y<8ks, where ks is the equivalent sand roughness height. The present results provide support for Townsends wall similarity hypothesis for uniform three-dimensional roughness. However, departures from wall similarity may be observed for rough surfaces where 5ks is large compared to the thickness of the inner layer.  相似文献   

15.
Turbulence in rough-wall boundary layers: universality issues   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Wind tunnel measurements of turbulent boundary layers over three-dimensional rough surfaces have been carried out to determine the critical roughness height beyond which the roughness affects the turbulence characteristics of the entire boundary layer. Experiments were performed on three types of surfaces, consisting of an urban type surface with square random height elements, a diamond-pattern wire mesh and a sand-paper type grit. The measurements were carried out over a momentum thickness Reynolds number (Re θ) range of 1,300–28,000 using two-component Laser Doppler anemometry (LDA) and hot-wire anemometry (HWA). A wide range of the ratio of roughness element height h to boundary layer thickness δ was covered (0.04 £ h/d £ 0.400.04 \leq h/\delta \leq 0.40). The results confirm that the mean profiles for all the surfaces collapse well in velocity defect form up to surprisingly large values of h/δ, perhaps as large as 0.2, but with a somewhat larger outer layer wake strength than for smooth-wall flows, as previously found. At lower h/δ, at least up to 0.15, the Reynolds stresses for all surfaces show good agreement throughout the boundary layer, collapsing with smooth-wall results outside the near-wall region. With increasing h/δ, however, the turbulence above the near-wall region is gradually modified until the entire flow is affected. Quadrant analysis confirms that changes in the rough-wall boundary layers certainly exist but are confined to the near-wall region at low h/δ; for h/δ beyond about 0.2 the quadrant events show that the structural changes extend throughout much of the boundary layer. Taken together, the data suggest that above h/δ ≈ 0.15, the details of the roughness have a weak effect on how quickly (with rising h/δ) the turbulence structure in the outer flow ceases to conform to the classical boundary layer behaviour. The present results provide support for Townsend’s wall similarity hypothesis at low h/δ and also suggest that a single critical roughness height beyond which it fails does not exist. For fully rough flows, the data also confirm that mean flow and turbulence quantities are essentially independent of Re θ; all the Reynolds stresses match those of smooth-wall flows at very high Re θ. Nonetheless, there is a noticeable increase in stress contributions from strong sweep events in the near-wall region, even at quite low h/δ.  相似文献   

16.
In the railroad industry a friction modifying agent may be applied to the rail or wheel in the form of a liquid jet. In this mode of application the interaction between the high-speed liquid jet and a fast moving surface is important. Seven different Newtonian liquids with widely varying shear viscosities were tested to isolate the effect of viscosity from other fluid properties. Tests were also done on five surfaces of different roughness heights to investigate the effects of surface roughness. High-speed video imaging was employed to scrutinize the interaction between the impacting jet and the moving surface. For all surfaces, decreasing the Reynolds number reduced the incidence of splash and consequently enhanced the transfer efficiency. At the elevated Weber numbers of the testing, the Weber number had a much smaller impact on splash than the Reynolds number. The ratio of the surface velocity to the jet velocity has only a small effect on the splash, whereas increasing the roughness-height-to-jet-diameter ratio substantially decreased the splash threshold.  相似文献   

17.
In the railroad industry a friction modifying agent may be applied to the rail or wheel in the form of a liquid jet. In this mode of application the interaction between the high-speed liquid jet and a fast moving surface is important. Seven different Newtonian liquids with widely varying shear viscosities were tested to isolate the effect of viscosity from other fluid properties. Tests were also done on five surfaces of different roughness heights to investigate the effects of surface roughness. High-speed video imaging was employed to scrutinize the interaction between the impacting jet and the moving surface. For all surfaces, decreasing the Reynolds number reduced the incidence of splash and consequently enhanced the transfer efficiency. At the elevated Weber numbers of the testing, the Weber number had a much smaller impact on splash than the Reynolds number. The ratio of the surface velocity to the jet velocity has only a small effect on the splash, whereas increasing the roughness-height-to-jet-diameter ratio substantially decreased the splash threshold.  相似文献   

18.
粗糙表面法向接触刚度的分形模型   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5  
提出了以往有关粗糙表面法向接触刚度理论研究工作的缺陷与不足,并在一定的前提假设下,基于球体与平面的接触理论和粗糙表面的分形接触理论,从理论上给出了具有尺度独立性的粗糙表面法向接触刚度分形模型,并进行了数字仿真研究。  相似文献   

19.
Some recent studies with irregular roughness suggest that the Nikuradse [Nikuradse, J., NACA TM 1292, National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (1933)] equivalent sand-grain roughness measure gives inconsistent results of the flow characteristics. In situations where the roughness is very strong to stifle or diminish the viscous effects the viscous scaling laws alone will not be very meaningful. The present study aims to find an alternative scaling parameter for such cases. Here, the measured mean and turbulent velocity profiles on a nonuniform roughness surface, simulating a gas turbine blade roughness, are presented. A nonzero wall normal pressure gradient is caused which is believed to contribute to the velocity deficit in the near-wall rough boundary layer velocity profile. The surface pressure variation is also directly influenced by the local roughness. The normal turbulent stresses are increased on the rough surface, the vertical component more than the longitudinal component. A pressure gradient velocity scale (similar to that proposed for adverse pressure gradient boundary layer modeling by Durbin and Belcher [Durbin, P.A. and Belcher, S.E., J. Fluid Mech. 238 (1992), 699-722] is defined to capture the pressure effects induced by such roughness on the inner layer properties.  相似文献   

20.
Direct numerical simulation (DNS) of turbulent channel flow over a two-dimensional irregular rough wall with uniform blowing (UB) was performed. The main objective is to investigate the drag reduction effectiveness of UB on a rough-wall turbulent boundary layer toward its practical application. The DNS was performed under a constant flow rate at the bulk Reynolds number values of 5600 and 14000, which correspond to the friction Reynolds numbers of about 180 and 400 in the smooth-wall case, respectively. Based upon the decomposition of drag into the friction and pressure contributions, the present flow is considered to belong to the transitionally-rough regime. Unlike recent experimental results, it turns out that the drag reduction effect of UB on the present two-dimensional rough wall is similar to that for a smooth wall. The friction drag is reduced similarly to the smooth-wall case by the displacement of the mean velocity profile. Besides, the pressure drag, which does not exist in the smooth-wall case, is also reduced; namely, UB makes the rough wall aerodynamically smoother. Examination of turbulence statistics suggests that the effects of roughness and UB are relatively independent to each other in the outer layer, which suggests that Stevenson’s formula can be modified so as to account for the roughness effect by simply adding the roughness function term.  相似文献   

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