Abstract
In canonical wall-bounded flows, point particle-laden turbulence exhibits a substantial interaction between scales with a variety of regimes, and the dynamics of the point particle-laden fluid are primarily identified by the Reynolds number. Such interactions are even more augmented in curved channels with variable curvature, and fixed Reynolds numbers demonstrate distinct flow behavior, as shown by Brethouwer [J. Fluid Mech. 931, A21 (2022)]. In this work, we demonstrate the characteristics of wall-bounded point particle-laden turbulent flows in sharply bent channels by evaluating the time-averaged velocity profiles at the straight section, at the bend, and in the inclined sections. The mean (time-averaged) normalized velocity profiles retain their well-known logarithmic features, with the von Kármán and additive constants taking different values depending on the acute inclination of the bend. Near-wall fluctuations at the bend are found to be intensified due to the bend that leads to increased turbulent activity. On examining the friction Reynolds number along the bent channel walls in the streamwise direction, a modulated behavior with an abrupt change at the bend is observed. Budgets of turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) are delineated for various inclinations of the bend at different sections of the channel and are compared with the unladen sharply bent turbulent channel flows, which illustrate that TKE is modulated at the bend and there is an overall attenuation of TKE on loading the channel with point particles.
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