Stratified turbulent flows abound in environmental and industrial settings. Examples are atmospheric boundary layer flows, the transport of nutrients and organisms and the mixing of heat and salinity in the oceans, fluid flow in heat exchangers, and the transport of reactants and
...
Stratified turbulent flows abound in environmental and industrial settings. Examples are atmospheric boundary layer flows, the transport of nutrients and organisms and the mixing of heat and salinity in the oceans, fluid flow in heat exchangers, and the transport of reactants and products in chemical reactions. These examples and many others consider stratified wall-bounded turbulence, in which the creation of turbulence by mechanical processes contends with its dissipation due to buoyancy effects. These flows are said to be stably stratified as these are inherently stable flows and are averse to mixing. The buoyancy effects alter the structure of the flow, and consequently the dynamics of mass, heat, and momentum transport. As density fluctuations become more severe, the Oberbeck-Boussinesq approximation becomes inaccurate and the resulting dynamics are not correctly predicted. In the current work, we developed and validated a numerical solver for direct numerical simulations (DNS) of turbulent flows featuring strong property variations. More precisely, we solve the Navier-Stokes equations in the limit of vanishing Mach number (so-called low-Mach number limit), with the fluid density given by the ideal gas law, and the dynamic viscosity and thermal conductivity also expressed as functions of temperature.
Our numerical solver is used to study stably-stratified turbulent channel flow under non-Oberbeck-Boussinesq conditions. The simulations are carried out at friction Reynolds number of 180, Prandtl number of 0.71, and friction Richardson number of the O(10). These non-dimensional numbers are the governing parameters and are defined based on the prescribed pressure drop and properties of the fluid at the reference temperature. Stratification is achieved by imposing constant temperature boundary conditions, with a high upper-to-lower wall temperature ratio (larger than 2), resulting in strong density variations in the flow. We will vary the temperature ratios and adjust gravity to maintain a similar Richardson number between cases, thereby isolating the effects of strong property variations in the flow dynamics. We will analyze the dynamics of heat and momentum transport under strong stratification for these conditions, also in light of DNS data of the same system under the Oberbeck-Boussinesq regime.