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The influence of normal stress anisotropy in predicting scalar dispersion with the vf model
Authors:David A. Philips  Riccardo Rossi  Gianluca Iaccarino
Affiliation:aDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, 488 Escondido Mall, Bldg 02-500, Rm 500A, Stanford, CA 94305-3035, United States;bLaboratorio di Termofluidodinamica Computazionale, Seconda Facoltà di Ingegneria di Forlì, Università degli Studi di Bologna, Via Fontanelle 40, 47121 Forlì, Italy
Abstract:A numerical study of scalar dispersion is presented to investigate the effectiveness of pairing the v2f turbulence model with algebraic models for the scalar flux. This approach is contrasted with utilizing a full Second Moment Closure (SMC) as the flow field input to the scalar model. Predictions of scalar transport in a turbulent channel and over a wavy wall are compared to available DNS databases. The latter case includes a scalar release from a point source and therefore detailed comparisons of the three-component turbulent scalar flux are reported. It is found that the transported variable v2, representing the near wall turbulent velocity fluctuation scale, can be used to increase the level of normal stress anisotropy provided to algebraic scalar models and thereby improve mean scalar prediction over that of the Standard Gradient Diffusion Hypothesis (SGDH). Improvement is most significant in the near wall region. Three specifications of the normal stresses, derived from v2, are considered to provide the link from the v2f model to the algebraic flux models used to close the scalar transport equation. Barycentric maps are used to examine the state of turbulence anisotropy in each case. As the anisotropy in the normal stress specification becomes more accurate, improvements are realized in the prediction of the spanwise flux as well as the mean concentration.
Keywords:Scalar dispersion   RANS   Wavy wall   Reynolds stress anisotropy   Algebraic flux models   v2&ndash  f
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