Abstract

The flow of 3 to 100 wppm aqueous solutions of a polyethyleneoxide polymer,Mw=6.2×;106, was studied in a 10.2 mm i.d. pipe lined with 0.15 mm V-groove riblets, at diametral Reynolds numbers from 300 to 150000. Measurements in the riblet pipe were accompanied by simultaneous measurements in a smooth pipe of the same diameter placed in tandem. The chosen conditions provided turbulent drag reductions from zero to the asymptotic maximum possible. The onset of polymer-induced drag reduction in the riblet pipe occurred at the same wall shear stress, τ* w =0.65 N/m2, as that in the smooth pipe. After onset, the polymer solutions in the riblet pipe initially exhibited linear segments on Prandtl-Karman coordinates, akin to those seen in the smooth pipe, with specific slope increment\(\delta /\sqrt c = 6\). The maximum drag reduction observed in the riblet pipe was independent of polymer concentration and well below the asymptotic maximum drag reduction observed in the smooth pipe. Polymer solution flows in the riblet pipe exhibited three regimes: (i) Hydraulically smooth, in which riblets induced no drag reduction, amid varying, and considerable, polymer-induced drag reduction; this regime extended to non-dimensional riblet heightsh+ 0; this regime extended from 5 70, and was observed in all polymer solutions at highh+, the more so as polymer-induced drag reduction increased, withR′ 8. The greatest drag enhancement in polymer solutions,R′=−7±1 ath+=55 whereS′=20, considerably exceeded that in solvent. Three-dimensional representations of riblet- and polymer-induced drag reductions versus turbulent flow parameters revealed a hitherto unknown “dome” region, 8<h+<31, 0<S′<10, 0<R′<1.5, containing a broad maximum at (h+,S′,R′) = (18, 5, 1.5). The existence of a dome was physically interpreted to suggest that riblets and polymers reduce drag by separate mechanisms.

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