The thermal mixing of the flow-crossing streams in a T-shaped pipe junction configuration with the main branch inflow forming an elbow is presently simulated by applying a RANS-based eddy-resolving model of turbulence. The low-temperature main stream enters the T-junction with a Reynolds number of Rem=107893 after passing through a 90o-turned elbow located upstream. The high temperature branch stream is injected perpendicularly into the main stream at a Reynolds number of Rem=5422. A significant difference between the flow velocities of the two streams leads to the formation of a characteristic mixing process resembling a reattached jet configuration. Of particular interest is the interference of the branch flow with the main flow characterized by secondary vortices – the so – called Dean vortices, that are convected from the curved main inlet generating a low-rank mixing structures in its wake. The reference LES-based (Large-Eddy Simulation) database is provided by Tunstall et al. (2016). The computational framework relying on the scale-adaptive turbulence modeling approach, introduced principally by Menter and Egorov (2010), is used to simulate the dynamics of large-scale turbulent structures with moderate spatial and temporal resolution requirements. The motion of unresolved subscale structures is described by an appropriately sensitized differential near-wall Reynolds stress model according to Jakirlić and Maduta (2015). In addition, Proper-Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) is used to analyze the prevailing flow and thermal field mechanisms. The results obtained show a reasonable level of agreement with the LES reference, both from the standpoint of first-order statistics and spectral reproduction of the dynamics of coherent structures.
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