Abstract

Energy dynamics in elastoinertial turbulence is investigated by performing different direct numerical simulations of stationary, homogeneous isotropic turbulence for the range of Weissenberg numbers 0 ≤ Wi ≤ 9. Viscoelastic effects are described by the finite extensibility nonlinear elastic-Peterlin model. It is found that the presence of the polymer additives can nontrivially modify the kinetic energy dynamics by suppressing the rate of the kinetic energy transfer and altering the locality nature of this energy transfer. Spectral representation of the elastic field revealed that the elastic energy is also transferred locally through different elastic degrees of freedom via a dominantly forward energy cascade. Moreover, the elastic energy spectrum can display a power-law behavior, k−m, with the possibility of different scaling exponents depending on the Wi number. It is observed that the energy exchange between macro- and microstructures is a two-directional process: there is a dominant energy transfer from the solvent large-scale structures to the polymers alongside a weak energy transfer from polymers to the solvent small-scale structures. This energy exchange consists of three different fluxes. Two of these fluxes equally transfer a small fraction of the kinetic energy into the mean and fluctuating elastic fields. However, the main energy conversion takes place between fluctuating kinetic and elastic fields through a completely nonlocal energy transfer process.

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