skip to main content
Caltech

GALCIT Colloquium

Friday, January 8, 2016
3:00pm to 4:00pm
Add to Cal
Guggenheim 133 (Lees-Kubota Lecture Hall)
Non-Linear Scale Interactions in a Forced Turbulent Boundary Layer
Subrahmanyam Duvvuri, Graduate Student, GALCIT, California Institute of Technology,

This study attempts to explore the dynamics of scale interactions in a turbulent boundary layer through a forcing-response type experimental approach. An emphasis is placed on the analysis of triadic wavenumber interactions since the governing Navier-Stokes equations for the flow necessitate a direct coupling between triadically consist scales. Two sets of experiments in which deterministic disturbances were introduced into the flow using a spatially-impulsive dynamic wall perturbation will be presented. In the first set of experiments, which were based on a recent investigation of dynamic forcing effects in a turbulent boundary layer, a 2D (spanwise constant) spatio-temporal normal mode was excited in the flow; the streamwise length and time scales of the synthetic mode roughly correspond to the very-large-scale-motions (VLSM) found naturally in canonical flows. Correlation studies between the large- and small-scale velocity signals reveal an alteration of the natural phase relations between scales by the synthetic mode. In particular, a strong phase-locking or organizing effect is seen on directly coupled small-scales through triadic interactions. Having characterized the bulk influence of a single energetic mode on the flow dynamics, the second set of experiments were aimed at isolating specific triadic interactions. Two distinct 2D large-scale normal modes were excited in the flow, and the response at the corresponding sum and difference wavenumbers was isolated from the turbulent signals. Results from this experiment serve as an unique demonstration of direct non-linear interactions in a fully turbulent wall-bounded flow, and allow for examination of phase relationships involving specific interacting scales. A direct connection is also made to the Navier-Stokes resolvent operator framework developed in recent literature. Results and analysis from the present work offer insights into the dynamical structure of wall turbulence, and have interesting implications for design of practical turbulence manipulation or control strategies.

For more information, please contact Vidyasagar by phone at 626-395-5760 or by email at [email protected].