Abstract

This study investigates the physics underlying the drag increase in a low Reynolds number turbulent channel flow due to varying-phase opposition control by means of direct numerical simulation and modal analysis. The drag increase occurs for an extended region of the parameter space and we consider a controller with a positive phase shift in Fourier domain between sensor measurement and actuator response as a representative example for this regime. Analyses of instantaneous flow fields as well as spatial power spectra show that the structure of drag-increased flows is remarkably different from that of drag-reduced and canonical flows. In particular, the near-wall region is dominated by structures of short streamwise and large spanwise extent. Isolation of a representative control scale shows that these energetic structures can be characterized as spanwise rollers, which induce strong ejection and sweep motions and lead to drag increase. The presence of rollers, and therefore drag increase, in the full nonlinear system correlates well with the presence of an amplified eigenvalue in the eigenspectrum of the linearized Navier–Stokes operator. It is further shown that the scales responsible for drag increase at positive phase shifts are inactive at negative phase shifts and do not contribute to drag reduction. These scales can therefore be excluded from a controller aimed at drag reduction, which relaxes the spatial resolution requirements on the control hardware. The eigenspectrum may be used as a computationally cheap tool to identify such detrimental scales during an early design stage.

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