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Turbulent flows over porous and rough substrates

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Turbulent flows over porous substrates are studied via a systematic exploration of the dependence of the flow properties on the substrate parameters, including permeability $K$ , grain pitch $L$ and depth $h$ . The study uses direct numerical simulations mainly for staggered-cube substrates with $L^+\approx 10$ – $50$ , $\sqrt {K}/L\approx 0.01$ – $0.25$ and depths from $h=O(L)$ to $h\gg L$ , ranging from typical impermeable rough surfaces to deep porous substrates. The results indicate that the permeability has significantly greater relevance than the grain size and microscale topology for the properties of the overlying flow, including the mean-flow slip and the shear across the interface, the drag increase relative to smooth-wall flow and the statistics and spectra of the overlying turbulence, whereas the direct effect of grain size is only noticeable near the interface as grain-coherent flow fluctuations. The substrate depth also has a significant effect, with shallower substrates suppressing the effective transpiration at the interface. Based on the direct-simulation results, we propose an empirical ‘equivalent permeability’ $K_{eq}^t$ that incorporates this effect and scales well the overlying turbulence for substrates with different depths, permeabilities, etc. This result suggests that wall normal transpiration driven by pressure fluctuations is the leading contributor to the changes in the drag and the overlying turbulence. Based on this, we propose a conceptual $h^+$ – $\sqrt {K^+}$ regime diagram where, for any given substrate topology, turbulence transitions smoothly from that over impermeable rough surfaces with $h=O(L)$ to that over deep porous substrates with $h^+\gtrsim 50$ , with the latter limit determined by the typical lengthscale of the overlying pressure fluctuations.

Description

Journal Title

Journal of Fluid Mechanics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0022-1120
1469-7645

Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/S013083/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/P020259/1)