Abstract

Turbulent pipe flow is still an essentially open area of research, boosted in the last two decades by considerable progress achieved on both the experimental and numerical frontiers, mainly related to the identification and characterization of coherent structures as basic building blocks of turbulence. It has been a challenging task, however, to detect and visualize these coherent states. We address, by means of stereoscopic particle image velocimetry, that issue with the help of a large diameter (6 in.) pipe loop, which allowed us to probe for coherent states at various moderate Reynolds numbers (5300 < Re < 29 000) of the single-phase Newtonian flow. Although these states have been observed at flow regimes around laminar–turbulent transition (Re ≈ 2300) and also at high Reynolds number pipe flow (Re ≈ 35 000), at moderate Reynolds numbers, their existence had not been observed yet by experiment. By conditionally averaging the flow fields with respect to their dominant azimuthal wavenumber of streamwise velocity streaks, we have been able to uncover the existence of ten well-defined coherent flow patterns. It turns out, as a remarkable phenomenon, that their occurrence probabilities and the total number of dominant modes do not essentially change as the Reynolds number is varied. Their occurrence probabilities are noted to be reasonably well described by a Poisson distribution, which suggests that low-speed streaks are created as a Poisson process on the pipe circular geometry.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call