Abstract

An approach to modeling the effect of rough surfaces on turbulent boundary-layer flow is proposed and developed. It is based on the concept of a rough-wall eddy viscosity, in which the pressure and viscous drag forces which arise on account of flow past roughness elements are recast as an equivalent viscous shear force within the roughness sublayer at the surface. This shear force is modeled as the wall-roughness eddy viscosity and carries information on both the flow Reynolds number and the roughness height. The modeling approach is developed and evaluated as part of a k–ε closure. When the wall-roughness eddy viscosity is modeled in proportion to (ks+)3/4, where ks+=ksuτ/ν and is the sand-grain roughness in wall units, it yields predictions of drag coefficients which are in excellent agreement with those from reference data for flow in rough-walled pipes, over a wide range of surface-roughness heights and Reynolds numbers. Its predictions are also in good agreement with experimental data for zero and favorable pressure gradient boundary layers over fully-rough surfaces.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call