Abstract

Through direct numerical simulations we investigate the effects of spatiotemporal intermittency as a result of stable stratification in surface heated stratified open channel flow. By adapting the density inversion criterion method of Portwood et al. [J. Fluid Mech., vol. 807, 2016, R2] for our flow, we demonstrate that the flow may be robustly separated into regions of active turbulence for which $Re_B \gtrsim {O}(10)$ and surrounding quiescent fluid, where $Re_B$ is the buoyancy Reynolds number. The intermittency in the flow spontaneously manifests as a deformed horizontal interface between the upper quiescent and lower turbulent flow, characterised by vigorous mixing from ‘overturning’ shear instabilities. The resulting vertical intermittency profile is accurately predicted by a local Monin–Obukhov length normalised by viscous wall units $\varLambda ^+$ such that the flow displays intermittency within the parameter range of $2.5 \lesssim \varLambda ^+ \lesssim 260$ . By considering conditional averages of the ‘turbulent’ and ‘quiescent’ flow separately, we find the ‘turbulent’ flow within this region to be described by constant critical gradient Richardson and turbulent Froude numbers of $Ri_{g,c} \approx 0.2$ and $Fr_c \approx 0.3$ . We find that the turbulent flow continues to display a $\varGamma \sim Fr^{-1}$ relationship when $Fr < Fr_c$ , whereas the quiescent flow shows no correlation between $\varGamma$ and $Fr$ , where $\varGamma$ is the flux coefficient. Hence, we demonstrate directly that for our flow, the emergence of an asymptotic ‘saturated’ $\varGamma$ regime in the limit of a low ‘global’ $Fr$ occurs due to intermittency and increasing contributions to measurements of $\varGamma$ from the quiescent flow.

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