Abstract

Compressible turbulent plane Couette flows are studied via direct numerical simulation for wall Reynolds numbers up to $Re_w=10\ 000$ and wall Mach numbers up to $M_w=5$ . Various turbulence statistics are compared with their incompressible counterparts at comparable semilocal Reynolds numbers $Re^*_{\tau,c}$ . The skin friction coefficient $C_f$ , which decreases with $Re_w$ , only weakly depends on $M_w$ . On the other hand, the thermodynamic properties (mean temperature, density and others) strongly vary with $M_w$ . Under proper scaling transformations, the mean velocity profiles for the compressible and incompressible cases collapse well and show a logarithmic region with the Kárman constant $\kappa =0.41$ . Compared with wall units, the semilocal units yield a better collapse for the profiles of the Reynolds stresses. While the wall-normal and spanwise Reynolds stress components slightly decrease in the near-wall region, the inner peak of the streamwise component notably increases with increasing $M_w$ – indicating that flow becomes more anisotropic when compressible. In addition, the near-wall turbulence production decreases as $M_w$ increases – due to rapid wall-normal changes of viscosity caused by viscous heating. The streamwise and spanwise energy spectra show that the length scale of near-wall coherent structures does not vary with $M_w$ in semilocal units. Consistent with those in incompressible flows, the superstructures (the large-scale streamwise rollers) with a typical spanwise scale of $\lambda _z/h\approx 1.5{\rm \pi}$ become stronger with increasing $Re_w$ . For the highest $Re_w$ studied, they contribute about $40\,\%$ of the Reynolds shear stress at the channel centre. Interestingly, flow visualization and correlation analysis show that the streamwise coherence of these structures degrades with increasing $M_w$ . In addition, at comparable $Re^*_{\tau,c}$ , the amplitude modulation of these structures on the near-wall small scales is quite similar between incompressible and compressible cases – but much stronger than that in plane Poiseuille flows.

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