Abstract

Large-eddy simulations (LES) of high Reynolds number flows are performed using a non-body conformal method in conjunction with a wall model. We use a simple wall function to model the wall-shear stress and the truncation error of the numerical discretization to model the sub-grid scale turbulence (implicit LES), although these can be easily replaced if necessary. The validation cases are: turbulent flow through an inclined channel, turbulent flow over a wavy surface, and supersonic flow over a circular cylinder. Since the near-wall grids are naturally coarse, the key is to use a method that is capable of capturing the flow dynamics accurately in the vicinity of the interface. Towards the purpose, we develop a Cartesian cut-cell method, referred to as the ghost-cell based cut-cell method (GC-CCM), in the context of fully compressible solutions of Navier–Stokes equations. This method employs ghost-cells inside the solid interface such that the local spatial reconstruction remains consistent everywhere including in the vicinity of the boundary. In order to capture the near-wall flow behavior more accurately with coarse grids, this method decomposes cell faces of merged cells and computes fluxes through each decomposed segment separately. The objective of this work is to qualify whether the proposed method can accurately represent the high Reynolds number flows in the vicinity of immersed interfaces. To analyze the performance of the proposed method, we compare the results to the corresponding numerical results from the two other non-body conformal methods, namely the ghost-cell based immersed boundary method (GCIBM) and standard cut-cell method (S-CCM), that are implemented in the same numerical solver. The comparison demonstrates that the proposed method is capable of capturing near-wall flows relatively accurately with coarse grids.

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