Extreme dissipation and intermittency in turbulence at very high Reynolds numbers

Extreme dissipation in turbulence

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

GE Elsinga (TU Delft - Fluid Mechanics)

Takashi Ishihara (Okayama University)

J.C.R. Hunt (TU Delft - Fluid Mechanics, University College London)

Research Group
Fluid Mechanics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2020.0591
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
Fluid Mechanics
Issue number
2243
Volume number
476

Abstract

Extreme dissipation events in turbulent flows are rare, but they can be orders of magnitude stronger than the mean dissipation rate. Despite its importance in many small-scale physical processes, there is presently no accurate theory or model for predicting the extrema as a function of the Reynolds number. Here, we introduce a new model for the dissipation probability density function (PDF) based on the concept of significant shear layers, which are thin regions of elevated local mean dissipation. At very high Reynolds numbers, these significant shear layers develop layered substructures. The flow domain is divided into the different layer regions and a background region, each with their own PDF of dissipation. The volume-weighted regional PDFs are combined to obtain the overall PDF, which is subsequently used to determine the dissipation variance and maximum. The model yields Reynolds number scalings for the dissipation maximum and variance, which are in agreement with the available data. Moreover, the power law scaling exponent is found to increase gradually with the Reynolds numbers, which is also consistent with the data. The increasing exponent is shown to have profound implications for turbulence at atmospheric and astrophysical Reynolds numbers. The present results strongly suggest that intermittent significant shear layer structures are key to understanding and quantifying the dissipation extremes, and, more generally, extreme velocity gradients.

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