Abstract

The main idea of this manuscript is to assess the wall-adapting local eddy-viscosity (WALE) model, which is designed for large-eddy simulation (LES) of turbulent boundary layer, in transitional flow. In contrast to many other sub-grid-scale (SGS) models, the WALE model demonstrates the asymptotic decay of the eddy viscosity in the vicinity of a solid wall in turbulent boundary layer without relying on a dynamic procedure on the SGS model coefficient. Furthermore, the WALE model yields zero eddy viscosity in pure shear flow. Such features are attractive for LES of laminar-to-turbulent transition, yet the WALE model has not been thoroughly investigated in transitional boundary layer flow. Well-resolved LES is conducted for canonical boundary layer transition triggered by sub-harmonic resonance. The model formulation is thoroughly analyzed in the transition process. The asymptotic behavior of the two major tensors, i.e., the strain rate tensor and the traceless tensor of the velocity gradient squared, are confirmed in the current well-resolved LES. The cubic decay of the eddy viscosity in the wall distance is confirmed from the asymptotic analysis on the transitional flow. The presence of the strain rate in the model formulation generates practically zero eddy viscosity in the pre-transition region, allowing interactions of small-amplitude instabilities. The traceless tensor of the velocity gradient squared escalates if small-scale eddies appear, leading to sizable eddy viscosity particularly in the log-law layer in turbulent flow. The response of the WALE model to grid resolution is also discussed. The performance of the WALE model is compared to two other SGS models, Smagorinsky and Vreman models with a constant coefficient, in the current transitional wall-bounded flow.

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