Abstract

Direct numerical simulations of fully-developed turbulent flow through a straight square duct with increasing corner rounding radius r were performed to study the influence of corner geometry on the secondary flow. Unexpectedly, the increased rounding of the corners from r=0 to 0.75 does not lead to a monotonic trend towards the pipe case of r=1. Instead, the secondary vortices relocate close to the region of wall-curvature change. This behavior is connected to the inhomogeneous interaction between near-wall bursting events, which are further characterized in this work with the definition of their local preferential direction. We compare our results with those obtained for the flow through a square duct (which corresponds to r=0) and through a round pipe (r=1), focusing on the influence of r on the wall-shear stress distribution and the turbulence statistics along the centerplane and the corner bisector. The former shows that high-speed streaks are preferentially located near the transition between straight and curved surfaces. The Reynolds numbers based on the centerplane friction velocity and duct half-height are Reτ, c ≃ 180 and 350 for the cases under study.

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