Laminar–turbulent transition in channel flow with superhydrophobic surfaces modelled as a partial slip wall
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Date
2019Journal
Journal of Fluid MechanicsRésumé
Superhydrophobic surfaces are capable of trapping gas pockets within the micro-roughnesses on their surfaces when submerged in a liquid, with the overall effect of lubricating the flow on top of them. These bio-inspired surfaces have proven to be capable of dramatically reducing skin friction of the overlying flow in both laminar and turbulent regimes. However, their effect in transitional conditions, in which the flow evolution strongly depends on the initial conditions, has still not been deeply investigated. In this work the influence of superhydrophobic surfaces on several scenarios of laminar–turbulent transition in channel flow is studied by means of direct numerical simulations. A single phase incompressible flow has been considered and the effect of the micro-structured superhydrophobic surfaces has been modelled imposing a slip condition with given slip length at both walls. The evolution from laminar, to transitional, to fully developed turbulent flow has been followed starting from several different initial conditions. When modal disturbances issued from linear stability analyses are used for perturbing the laminar flow, as in supercritical conditions or in the classical K-type transition scenario, superhydrophobic surfaces are able to delay or even avoid the onset of turbulence, leading to a considerable drag reduction. Whereas, when transition is triggered by non-modal mechanisms, as in the optimal or uncontrolled transition scenarios, which are currently observed in noisy environments, these surfaces are totally ineffective for controlling transition. Superhydrophobic surfaces can thus be considered effective for delaying transition only in low-noise environments, where transition is triggered mostly by modal mechanisms.
Fichier(s) constituant cette publication
- Nom:
- DYNFLUID_JFM_2019_PICELLA.pdf
- Taille:
- 4.486Mo
- Format:
- Description:
- Article
- Fin d'embargo:
- 2020-04-24
Cette publication figure dans le(s) laboratoire(s) suivant(s)
Documents liés
Visualiser des documents liés par titre, auteur, créateur et sujet.
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecturePICELLA, Francesco; LUSSEYRAN, F; CHERUBINI, Stefania; PASTUR, L; ROBINET, Jean-Christophe; LOISEAU, Jean-Christophe (Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2018)The transition to unsteadiness of a three-dimensional open cavity flow is investigated using the joint application of direct numerical simulations and fully three-dimensional linear stability analyses, providing a clear ...
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecturePICELLA, Francesco; BUCCI, Michele Alessandro; CHERUBINI, Stefania; ROBINET, Jean-Christophe (Elsevier, 2019)Research on laminar-turbulent transition of wall-bounded parallel flows has usually focused on controlled scenarios where transition is triggered by perturbations having simple shapes and spectra. These disturbances strongly ...
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureVariational optimization has been recently applied to nonlinear systems with many degrees of freedom such as shear flows undergoing transition to turbulence. This technique has unveiled powerful energy growth mechanisms ...
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecturePICELLA, Francesco; ROBINET, Jean-Christophe; CHERUBINI, Stefania (Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2020-08)Superhydrophobic surfaces dramatically reduce the skin friction of overlying liquid flows, providing a lubricating layer of gas bubbles trapped within their surface nano-sculptures. Under wetting-stable conditions, different ...
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureCHERUBINI, Stefania; LERICHE, Emmanuel; ROBINET, Jean-Christophe; LOISEAU, Jean-Christophe (Elsevier, 2015)The linear global instability and resulting transition to turbulence induced by a cylindrical roughness element of heighth and diameter d=3h immersed within an incompressible boundary layer flow along a flat plate is ...