On the use of two-point velocity correlation in wall-pressure models for turbulent flow past a trailing edge under adverse pressure gradient

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

P. Jaiswal (TU Delft - Wind Energy, University of Sherbrooke)

S. Moreau (University of Sherbrooke)

Francesco Avallone (TU Delft - Wind Energy)

D. Ragni (TU Delft - Wind Energy)

S. Probsting (Shanghai Jiao Tong University, TU Delft - Wind Energy)

Research Group
Wind Energy
Copyright
© 2020 P. Jaiswal, Stéphane Moreau, F. Avallone, D. Ragni, S. Pröbsting
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0021121
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 P. Jaiswal, Stéphane Moreau, F. Avallone, D. Ragni, S. Pröbsting
Research Group
Wind Energy
Issue number
10
Volume number
32
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Abstract

Two-point velocity statistics near the trailing edge of a controlled diffusion airfoil are obtained, both experimentally and analytically, by decomposing Poisson's equation for pressure into the mean-shear (MS) and turbulence-turbulence (TT) interaction terms. The study focuses on the modeling of each interaction term, in order to allow for the reconstruction of the wall-pressure spectra from tomographic velocimetry data, without numerically solving for pressure. The two-point correlation of the wall-normal velocity that describes the magnitude of the MS source term is found to be influenced by various competing factors such as blocking, mean-shear, and the adverse mean pressure gradient. The blocking term is found to supersede the other interaction terms close to the wall, making the two-point velocity correlation self-similar. The most dominant TT term that contributes to far-field noise for an observer located perpendicular to the airfoil chord at the mid-span is shown to be the one that quantifies the variation of the wall-normal velocity fluctuations in the longitudinal direction because of the statistical homogeneity of turbulence in planes parallel to the wall. A model to determine the contribution of the TT interaction term is proposed where the fourth-order two-point correlation can be modeled using Lighthill's approximation. However, its contribution toward wall-pressure spectra is found to be substantially lower than the MS term in the present case.

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