Abstract

In the present study, numerical investigations have been performed to study the flow transition mechanism in wavy channels using finite volume-based open source field operation and manipulation. Two different wavy channel configurations are chosen, which represent two different flow destabilization mechanisms, viz., Kelvin–Helmholtz and centrifugal instabilities. Sinusoidal walls with out-of-phase and in-phase channel configurations have been considered in the present study. Steady to chaotic flow transition in two different channel configurations are investigated by varying Reynolds number. A detailed flow regime map is presented for the two different wavy channel configurations. Unsteady flow features have been illustrated with the help of instantaneous streamlines, velocity contours, vorticity contours, and iso-Q surfaces. For the out-of-phase configuration, the flow changes from two-dimensional steady to two-dimensional unsteady in the Re range of 175–185, and then three-dimensional unsteady flow is observed for the Re varying from 250 to 260. On the contrary, for the in-phase configuration, the transition happens directly from steady two-dimensional flow (Re < 101) to unsteady three-dimensional (Re > 102) in a very narrow range of Re. Transitions in the two different wavy channels have been examined in detail using Hilbert–Huang transformation, phase-space reconstruction, Poincaré section, recurrence plot, and dynamic mode decomposition. Frequency, growth rate, and vortex structures of the dominant modes are illustrated corresponding to each value of Re for the considered channel configurations.

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