Abstract
The study of the exchange of momentum and energy between wave components
of the turbulent velocity field, the so-called triad interactions,
offers a unique way of visualizing and describing turbulence. Most
often, this study has been carried out by direct numerical simulations
or by power spectral measurements. Due to the complexity of the problem
and the great range of velocity scales in high Reynolds number developed
turbulence, direct measurements of the interaction between the
individual wave components have been rare. In the present work, we
present measurements and related computations of triad interactions
between controlled wave components injected into an approximately
laminar and uniform flow from an open wind tunnel by vortex shedding
from two rods suspended into the flow. This results in two-dimensional
interactions of three-dimensional turbulence, which makes the analysis
of the triadic interactions considerably less complex to analyze than in
a fully developed three-dimensional flow. With the information obtained
from the computations, we are able to isolate the individual triad
interactions contributing to the generated frequency components as the
flow develops downstream as well as understanding, mapping out and
predicting the strengths of these interactions. The analysis also
provides the time constants governing the development of higher order
frequency components. We are thus able to see the pattern of frequency
combinations, the strengths of the individual mode combinations and the
time sequence in which they occur. Any of the higher order combinations
is not just the result of a single term in the Navier–Stokes Equation,
but a combination of various previous combinations occurring with
different strengths and in a varied pattern of generation. The
combination of these experiments and computations thus provide unique
insight into the inner workings of turbulence and shows how the
nonlinear term in the Navier–Stokes equation on average forces the
energy towards higher frequencies, which is the reason for the so-called
energy cascade.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 111239 |
| Journal | Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science |
| Volume | 157 |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| ISSN | 0894-1777 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Invited paperKeywords
- Triad interactions
- Nonlocal interactions
- Kolmogorov theory of turbulence
- Navier–Stokes equation
- Vortex shedding
- Square cylinder shedding