Abstract

The purpose of the present study is to investigate the influence of aspect ratio on the higher- order statistics of velocity fluctuations, conditional statistics, turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) fluxes, TKE budget, and Reynolds stress anisotropy in hydraulically rough narrow open channel flow (OCF). In the experiments, the aspect ratios were maintained low and varied between 2.5 and 4. The velocities were measured with an acoustic Doppler velocimeter (ADV). The higher-order moments, quadrant analysis, and TKE budget from the present experiments were compared with available literature data in wide and narrow OCFs to elucidate the effect of the aspect ratio. In this analysis, the third-order moments of velocity fluctuations were found to be sensitive to the aspect ratio in the outer region. The fractional contributions of all quadrant events are approximately equal in magnitude in lower aspect ratio flows, whereas ejections and sweeps are the dominant events as the aspect ratio increases. The upward transfer of TKE flux increases in the outer layer with increase in aspect ratio. In the inner layer, the TKE production and rate of dissipation are found to be increasing with decreasing aspect ratio. Therefore, the production and dissipation of TKE are dependent on the aspect ratio of the flow. The analysis of Reynolds stress AIM reveals that for low aspect ratio flows turbulence tends to attain rod-like axisymmetric turbulence only in the intermediate layer whereas for higher aspect ratio, turbulence attains rod-like axisymmetric turbulence throughout the depth.

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