Abstract
In the last decade, with the growing demand for efficient and more sustainable products that reduce our CO2 footprint, progresses in Additive Manufacturing (AM) have paved the way for optimized heat exchangers, whose disruptive design will heavily depend on predictive numerical simulations. Typical AM rough surfaces show limited resemblance to the artificially constructed rough surfaces that have been the basis of most prior fundamental research on turbulent flow over rough walls. Hence, current wall models used in steady and unsteady three-dimensional (3D) Navier–Stokes simulations do not consider such characteristics. Therefore, a high-fidelity Large Eddy Simulation (LES) database is built to develop and assess novel wall models for AM. This article investigates the flow in rough pipes built from the surfaces created using AM techniques at Siemens based on Nickel Alloy IN939 material. We developed a code to generate the desired rough pipes from scanned planar surfaces. We performed high-fidelity LES of turbulent rough pipe flows at Reynolds number, Re = 11 700, to reveal the influence of roughness parameters on turbulence, mainly the average roughness height and the effective slope. The equivalent sand-grain roughnesses, ks, of the present AM rough surfaces are predicted using the Colebrook correlation. The main contributors to the skin friction coefficient are found to be turbulence and drag forces. In the present study, the existence of a logarithmic layer is marked even for high values of ks. The mean flow, the velocity fluctuations, and the Reynolds shear stresses show turbulence's strong dependence on the roughness topography. Profiles of turbulence statistics are compared by introducing an effective wall-normal distance defined as zero-plane displacement. The effective distance collapses the shear stresses and the velocity fluctuations outside the roughness sublayer; thus, Townsend's similarity of the streamwise mean velocity is marked for the present roughnesses. Furthermore, a mixed scaling is introduced to improve the collapse of turbulence statistics in the roughness sublayer. In addition, an attempt to investigate the impact of surface roughness on flow physics using the acquired LES results based on quadrant analysis of the Reynolds shear stresses and anisotropy of turbulence is made.
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