Wall-attached structures of velocity fluctuations in a turbulent boundary layer

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Wall turbulence is a ubiquitous phenomenon in nature and engineering applications, yet predicting such turbulence is difficult due to its complexity. High-Reynolds-number turbulence arises in most practical flows, and is particularly complicated because of its wide range of scales. Although the attached-eddy hypothesis postulated by Townsend can be used to predict turbulence intensities and serves as a unified theory for the asymptotic behaviours of turbulence, the presence of coherent structures that contribute to the logarithmic behaviours has not been observed in instantaneous flow fields. Here, we demonstrate the logarithmic region of the turbulence intensity by identifying wall-attached structures of the velocity fluctuations through the direct numerical simulation of a moderate-Reynolds-number boundary layer . The wall-attached structures are self-similar with respect to their heights , and in particular the population density of the streamwise component scales inversely with , reminiscent of the hierarchy of attached eddies. The turbulence intensities contained within the wall-parallel components ( and ) exhibit the logarithmic behaviour. The tall attached structures ( 100$]]>) of are composed of multiple uniform momentum zones (UMZs) with long streamwise extents, whereas those of the cross-stream components ( and ) are relatively short with a comparable width, suggesting the presence of tall vortical structures associated with multiple UMZs. The magnitude of the near-wall peak observed in the streamwise turbulent intensity increases with increasing , reflecting the nested hierarchies of the attached structures. These findings suggest that the identified structures are prime candidates for Townsend's attached-eddy hypothesis and that they can serve as cornerstones for understanding the multiscale phenomena of high-Reynolds-number boundary layers. © 2018 Cambridge University Press.
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Issue Date
2018-09
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, v.856, pp.958 - 983

ISSN
0022-1120
DOI
10.1017/jfm.2018.727
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/248310
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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