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Geometry effects on mean wake topology and large-scale coherent structures of wall-mounted prisms

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Turbulent wake behind five wall-mounted rectangular prisms is measured by time-resolved particle-image velocimetry with an aim to generalize the effects of prism geometry (in terms of aspect ratio, AR, and… Click to show full abstract

Turbulent wake behind five wall-mounted rectangular prisms is measured by time-resolved particle-image velocimetry with an aim to generalize the effects of prism geometry (in terms of aspect ratio, AR, and side ratio, SR) on the wake characteristics. For the time-averaged wake, the arch-type topology is well supported. With AR increasing from 1 to 4 for the square prisms, a transition process between the “dipole” and “quadrupole” wake patterns is observed. On the other hand, an increase in SR does not seem to greatly influence the mean wake structure behind rectangular prisms unless reattachment occurs on the side walls. The turbulent wake velocity fields are analyzed with a proper orthogonal decomposition method, considering the intrinsic symmetries of vortex shedding activities. In the extraction of dominant low-order flow structures, the low-frequency shift mode and periodic vortex shedding mode pair are always captured as the most important turbulent kinetic energy contributors but with significant nonlinear cross-superposition. A low-pass Gaussian filter is then introduced to achieve separation between these two types of coherent structures via new spatial modes, which maintain the same mode shape patterns. The size of the shift mode vortex is found closely related to the time-averaged wake structure, while the pattern of the Karman vortex shedding mode pair seems completely independent. The two separated pure modes develop continuously and compete with each other along the model height. The present study appears to be the first one to investigate the effects of prism geometry on large-scale coherent wake motions from this perspective.Turbulent wake behind five wall-mounted rectangular prisms is measured by time-resolved particle-image velocimetry with an aim to generalize the effects of prism geometry (in terms of aspect ratio, AR, and side ratio, SR) on the wake characteristics. For the time-averaged wake, the arch-type topology is well supported. With AR increasing from 1 to 4 for the square prisms, a transition process between the “dipole” and “quadrupole” wake patterns is observed. On the other hand, an increase in SR does not seem to greatly influence the mean wake structure behind rectangular prisms unless reattachment occurs on the side walls. The turbulent wake velocity fields are analyzed with a proper orthogonal decomposition method, considering the intrinsic symmetries of vortex shedding activities. In the extraction of dominant low-order flow structures, the low-frequency shift mode and periodic vortex shedding mode pair are always captured as the most important turbulent kinetic energy contributors but with significant no...

Keywords: mode; mean wake; wall mounted; topology; geometry

Journal Title: Physics of Fluids
Year Published: 2019

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