Abstract

Although engineering turbulence modeling is a well-established field, there is room for new ideas. In the current work, the rate of Reynolds stress generation is considered the product of a probability coefficient dependent on the viscous effect over the inertia effect and an energetic parameter expressed in terms of velocity dependence. The rate of Reynolds stress dissipation is defined as a simple second-order power function; this function emphasizes the nature of the local interactions (molecular level at their origins) that are similar to those for the reaction. Hence, the current approach can be called a reaction engineering approach for turbulence. Examples analyzed with this approach are: 1) the Universal Law of the Wall; 2) diameter-wide axial velocity distribution of the circular pipe (internal flow); 3) bulk behavior of the axial velocity distribution for a turbulent planar jet (external flow); and 4) far-field axial velocity distribution for a planar jet with numerical simulations. These findings suggest the potential of this approach for future exploration.

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