Abstract

Compliant walls offer the tantalising possibility of passive flow control. This paper examines the mechanics of compliant surfaces driven by wall shear stresses, with solely in-plane velocity response. We present direct numerical simulations of turbulent channel flows at low ($Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}\approx 180$) and intermediate ($Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}\approx 1000$) Reynolds numbers. In-plane spanwise and streamwise active controls proposed by Choiet al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 262, 1994, pp. 75–110) are revisited in order to characterise beneficial wall fluctuations. An analytical framework is then used to map the parameter space of the proposed compliant surfaces. The direct numerical simulations show that large-scale passive streamwise wall fluctuations can reduce friction drag by at least$3.7\pm 1\,\%$, whereas even small-scale passive spanwise wall motions lead to considerable drag penalty. It is found that a well-designed compliant wall can theoretically exploit the drag-reduction mechanism of an active control; this may help advance the development of practical active and passive control strategies for turbulent friction drag reduction.

Highlights

  • Compliant wall technology originates from Gray’s paradox (Gray 1936) concerning the apparent deficit between the muscle power of a dolphin and the power required by the dolphin to sustain its motion while swimming

  • This paper examines the mechanics of compliant surfaces driven by wall shear stresses, with solely in-plane velocity response

  • We present direct numerical simulations of turbulent channel flows at low (Reτ ≈ 180) and intermediate (Reτ ≈ 1000) Reynolds numbers

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Summary

Objectives

We aim to identify wall motions during active controls and their connection with near-wall events, in order to evaluate whether similar wall motions can be sustained passively

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