Abstract

We perform direct numerical simulations (DNS) of the fully developed turbulent channel flow with a passive scalar subjected to constant time-averaged scalar fluxes at the wall. The first case (case I) considers a constant time-averaged scalar flux $\left \langle q_w \right \rangle$ along with the specific condition of a non-fluctuating scalar $\theta _w$ imposed at the wall implying zero wall scalar fluctuation $\theta '_w=0$ and zero variance (isoscalar boundary condition) whereas the second case (case II) accounts for a constant instantaneous scalar flux $q_w$ in time and space leading to zero gradient of scalar fluctuation along the normal to the wall $(\partial \theta '/ \partial x_n)_w = 0$ (isoflux boundary condition) implying a non-zero variance. The friction Reynolds number takes on the value $R_\tau =395$ and the molecular Prandtl numbers considered are $P_r=0.01$ , 0.1, 1 and 10. The purpose is to investigate the effect of the wall scalar fluctuations on the scalar field. Emphasis is put on the mean passive scalar $\left \langle \theta \right \rangle$ , the half-scalar variance $k_\theta$ , the turbulent scalar fluxes $\tau _{i \theta }$ , the correlation coefficients $R_{i \theta }$ , the passive scalar to dynamic time-scale ratio $\mathcal {R}$ , the turbulent Prandtl number $Pr_t$ and higher-order scalar statistics. Systematic comparisons between these two scalar fields are undertaken. As a result of interest, it is found that the mean scalar remains almost the same whatever the type of the boundary layer condition but not the scalar variance. The budgets of transport equations for the half-scalar variance and turbulent fluxes reveal that some scalar quantities such as the dissipation-rate and the molecular diffusion terms are highly modified in the near-wall region but not really the production, diffusion and the scalar-pressure gradient correlation terms in a first approximation. Visualization of the instantaneous scalar fields indicates that the topology of the structures is strongly modified as the Prandtl number increases from $P_r=0.01$ up to $10$ . Finally, it is shown how to use this DNS database to devise and calibrate scalar flux equation models in the framework of both first and second moment closures. This study suggests that accounting for wall scalar fluctuations should be considered in the simulation of turbulent flows involving fluid and solid combinations at the interface and provides a useful high resolution DNS database.

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