Jordanian-German Winter Academy February 5th-11th 2006 Eddy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 46
About This Presentation
Title:

Jordanian-German Winter Academy February 5th-11th 2006 Eddy

Description:

Jordanian-German Winter Academy February 5th-11th 2006 Eddy Viscosity Model Participant Name : Eng. Tareq Salameh Mechanical Engineering Department – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:61
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: fetwebJu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Jordanian-German Winter Academy February 5th-11th 2006 Eddy


1
Eddy Viscosity Model
Jordanian-German Winter Academy February 5th-11th
2006
Participant Name Eng. Tareq Salameh Mechanical
Engineering Department University of jordan
2
Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS)
  • The averaging procedure introduces additional
    unknown terms containing products of the
    fluctuating quantities, which act like additional
    stresses in the fluid. These terms, called
    turbulent or Reynolds stresses, are difficult
    to determine directly and so become further
    unknowns.

Reynolds stress
and the Reynolds flux
These terms arise from the non-linear convective
term in the un-averaged equations.
3
Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) (Cont.)
  • The Reynolds (turbulent) stresses need to be
    modeled by additional equations of known
    quantities in order to achieve closure.
  • Closure implies that there is a sufficient
    number of equations for all the unknowns,
    including the Reynolds-Stress tensor resulting
    from the averaging procedure.

4
Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) (Cont.)
  • The equations used to close the system define
    the type of turbulence model Reynolds Averaged
    Navier Stokes (RANS) Equations.
  • Type of turbulence model based on RANS
    (classical type)
  • Eddy viscosity model (I)
  • Reynolds stress model (II)
  • Another type
  • Large Eddy Simulation model
  • Detached Eddy Simulation model

5
Eddy viscosity model
  • One proposal suggests that turbulence consists
    of small eddies which are continuously forming
    and dissipating.
  • Definition of eddy viscosity model.
  • The eddy viscosity hypothesis assumes that the
    Reynolds stresses can be related to the mean
    velocity gradients and Eddy (turbulent) Viscosity
    by the gradient diffusion hypothesis, in a manner
    analogous to the relationship between the stress
    and strain tensors in laminar Newtonian flow.

6
Eddy viscosity model
  • Here, ?t is the Eddy Viscosity or Turbulent
    Viscosity. This has to be prescribed.

Analogous to the eddy viscosity hypothesis is the
eddy diffusivity hypothesis, which states that
the Reynolds fluxes of a scalar are linearly
related to the mean scalar gradient
7
Eddy viscosity model
  • Here, ?t is the Eddy Diffusivity, and this has
    to be prescribed. The Eddy Diffusivity can be
    written

Where Prt is the turbulent Prandtl number. Eddy
diffusivities are then prescribed using the
turbulent Prandtl number.
8
Eddy viscosity model
  • The above equations can only express the
    turbulent fluctuation terms of functions of the
    mean variables if the turbulent viscosity, ?t ,
    is known. Both the k-? and k-? two-equation
    turbulence models provide this variable.
  • Subject to these hypotheses, the Reynolds
    averaged momentum and scalar transport equations
    become

9
Eddy viscosity model
  • where B is the sum of the body forces, µeff is
    the Effective Viscosity, and Geff is the
    Effective Diffusivity, defined by,

and
is a modified pressure, defined by
where
is the bulk viscosity.
10
The Zero Equation Model
  • Very simple eddy viscosity models compute a
    global value for µt from the product of turbulent
    mean velocity scale, Ut, and a a turbulence
    geometric length scale , lt using an empirical
    formula, as proposed by Prandtl and Kolmogorov

Where
f?0.01
is a proportionality constant
Because no additional transport equations are
solved, these models are termed zero equation
11
The Zero Equation Model (Cont.)
  • The velocity scale is taken to be the maximum
    velocity in the fluid domain.
  • The length scale is derived using the
    formula

where VD is the fluid domain volume
This model has little physical foundation and is
not recommended.
12

Two Equation Turbulence Models
  • Two-equation turbulence models (k-? and k-? )
    are very widely used and much more sophisticated
    than the zero equation models .
  • Both the velocity and length scale are solved
    using separate transport equations (hence the
    term two-equation)
  • The turbulence velocity scale and the
    turbulent length scale are computed from the
    turbulent kinetic energy and turbulent kinetic
    energy and its dissipation rate respectively.

13
The k-? model
  • k is the turbulence kinetic energy and is
    defined as the variance of the fluctuations in
    velocity.
  • ? is the turbulence eddy dissipation (the rate
    at which the velocity fluctuations dissipate)
  • The k-? model introduces two new variables
    into the system of equations.
  • The continuity equation is then

14
The k-? model (Cont.)
  • and the momentum equation becomes

where
B is the sum of body forces.
µeff is the effective viscosity accounting for
turbulence.
is the modified pressure given by
15
The k-? model (Cont.)
  • The k-? model, like the zero equation model,
    is based on the eddy viscosity concept, so that

where µt is the turbulence viscosity.
The model k- ? assumes that the turbulence
viscosity µt is linked to the turbulence kinetic
energy and dissipation via the relation
Where C?0.09
16
The k-? model (Cont.)
The values of k and ? come directly from the
differential transport equations for the
turbulence kinetic energy and turbulence
dissipation rate
17
The k-? model (Cont.)
  • Where Ce11.44 , Ce21.92 , ?k1.0 and ??1.3
    are constants. Pk is the turbulence production
    due to viscous and buoyancy forces, which is
    modeled using

For incompressible flow,
is small
and the second term on the right side of equation
does not contribute significantly to the
production.
18
The k-? model (Cont.)
  • For compressible flow,

is only large in regions with
high velocity divergence, such as at shocks.
The term 3µt in the second term is based on the
frozen stress assumption . This prevents the
values of k and ? becoming too large through
shocks.
19
The k-? model (Cont.)
  • there are applications for which these models
    may not be suitable

Flows with boundary layer separation. Flows
with sudden changes in the mean strain
rate. Flows in rotating fluids. Flows over
curved surfaces.
A Reynolds Stress model may be more appropriate
for flows with sudden changes in strain rate or
rotating flows, while the SST model may be more
appropriate for separated flows.
20
The k-? model (Cont.)
Turbulent Recirculation Flow
21
Buoyancy Turbulence
  • If the full buoyancy model is being used, the
    buoyancy production term Pkb is modeled as

and if the Boussinesq buoyancy model is being
used, it is
22
The RNG k-? Model
  • The RNG k-? model is based on renormalisation
    group analysis of the Navier-Stokes equations.
  • The transport equations for turbulence generation
    and dissipation are the same as those for the
    standard k-? model, but the model constants
    differ, and the constant C?1 is replaced by the
    function C?1RNG.

23
The RNG k-? Model (Cont.)
  • The transport equation for turbulence
    dissipation becomes

Where,
Where ??RNG0.7179, C?2RNG1.68,
?RNG0.012, C?RNG0.085

24
The k-? Model
  • One of the advantages of the k-? formulation
    is the near wall treatment for low-Reynolds
    number computations.

The model does not involve the complex non-linear
damping functions required for the k-? model and
is therefore more accurate and more robust.
The k-? models assumes that the turbulence
viscosity is linked to the turbulence kinetic
energy and turbulent frequency via the relation
25
The Wilcox k-? Model
  • The starting point of the present formulation
    is the k-? model developed by Wilcox1.

It solves two transport equations, one for the
turbulent kinetic energy, k, and one for the
turbulent frequency,?.
The stress tensor is computed from the
eddy-viscosity concept.
26
The Wilcox k-? Model (Cont.)
  • k-equation

?-equation
In addition to the independent variables, the
density, ?, and the velocity vector, U, are
treated as known quantities from the
Navier-Stokes method. Pk is the production rate
of turbulence, which is calculated as in the k-?
model
27
The Wilcox k-? Model (Cont.)
  • The model constants are given by

The unknown Reynolds stress tensor,?, is
calculated from
28
The Wilcox k-? Model (Cont.)
  • In order to avoid the build-up of turbulent
    kinetic energy in stagnation regions, a limiter
    to the production term is introduced into the
    equations according to Menter 2 

With clim 10 for ? based models. This limiter
does not affect the shear layer performance of
the model, but has consistently avoided the
stagnation point build-up in aerodynamic
simulations.
29
The Baseline (BSL) k-? Model
  • The main problem with the Wilcox model is its
    well known strong sensitivity to freestream
    conditions Menter 3.

Depending on the value specified for ? at the
inlet, a significant variation in the results of
the model can be obtained.
This is undesirable and in order to solve the
problem, a blending between the k-? model near
the surface and the k-? model in the outer region
was developed by Menter 2.
30
The Baseline (BSL) k-? Model (Cont.)
  • It consists of a transformation of the k-?
    model to a k-? formulation and a subsequent
    addition of the corresponding equations.

The Wilcox model is thereby multiplied by a
blending function F1 and the transformed k-?
model by a function 1-F1. F1 is equal to one
near the surface and switches over to zero inside
the boundary layer. At the boundary layer edge
and outside the boundary layer, the standard k-?
model is therefore recovered.
31
The Baseline (BSL) k-? Model (Cont.)
  • Wilcox model

Transformed k-? model
32
The Baseline (BSL) k-? Model (Cont.)
  • Now the equations of the Wilcox model are
    multiplied by function F1, the transformed k-?
    equations by a function 1-F1 and the
    corresponding k- and ?- equations are added to
    give the BSL model

33
The Baseline (BSL) k-? Model (Cont.)
  • The coefficients of the new model are a
    linear combination of the corresponding
    coefficients of the underlying models

coefficients are listed again for completeness
34
The Shear Stress Transport (SST) k-? Based Model
  • The k-? based SST model accounts for the
    transport of the turbulent shear stress and gives
    highly accurate predictions of the onset and the
    amount of flow separation under adverse pressure
    gradients.

The BSL model combines the advantages of the
Wilcox and the k-e model, but still fails to
properly predict the onset and amount of flow
separation from smooth surfaces
The main reason is that both models do not
account for the transport of the turbulent shear
stress.
35
The Shear Stress Transport (SST) k-? Based Model
(Cont.)
  • This results in an over prediction of the
    eddy-viscosity.

The proper transport behavior can be obtained by
a limiter to the formulation of the
eddy-viscosity
Where
36
The Shear Stress Transport (SST) k-? Based Model
(Cont.)
  • Again F2 is a blending function similar to
    F1, which restricts the limiter to the wall
    boundary layer, as the underlying assumptions are
    not correct for free shear flows. S is an
    invariant measure of the strain rate.

The blending functions are critical to the
success of the method.
37
The Shear Stress Transport (SST) k-? Based Model
(Cont.)
  • Their formulation is based on the distance to
    the nearest surface and on the flow variables.

With
Where y is the distance to the nearest wall and ?
is the kinematic viscosity and
With
38
The (k-?)1E Eddy Viscosity Transport Model
  • A very simple one-equation model has been
    developed by Menter 4 5.

It is derived directly from the k-e model and is
therefore named the (k-?)1E model
Where
is the kinematic eddy viscosity,
is the
turbulent kinematic eddy viscosity and s is a
model constant.
39
The (k-?)1E Eddy Viscosity Transport Model (Cont.)
  • The model contains a destruction term, which
    accounts for the structure of turbulence and is
    based on the von Karman length scale

Where S is the shear strain rate tensor. The eddy
viscosity is computed from
40
The (k-?)1E Eddy Viscosity Transport Model (Cont.)
  • In order to prevent the a singularity of the
    formulation as the von Karman length scale goes
    to zero, the destruction term is reformulated as
    follows

41
The (k-?)1E Eddy Viscosity Transport Model (Cont.)
  • The coefficients are

42
The (k-?)1E Eddy Viscosity Transport Model (Cont.)
  • Low Reynolds Number Formulation

Low Reynolds formulation of the model is obtained
by including damping functions. Near wall damping
functions have been developed to allow
integration to the surface
Where D2 is required to compute the
eddy-viscosity which goes into the momentum
equations
43
Development of maximum deficit velocity in
axisymmetric wake
mixing length model
44
Reference
  • 1 Wilcox, D.C..Multiscale model for turbulent
    flows.In AIAA 24th Aerospace Sciences Meeting.
    American Institute of Aeronautics and
    Astronautics, 1986.
  • 2 Menter, F.R..Two-equation eddy-viscosity
    turbulence models for engineering
    applications.AIAA-Journal., 32(8), 1994.
  • 3Menter, F.R., Multiscale model for turbulent
    flows.In 24th Fluid Dynamics Conference. American
    Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1993.
  • 4 Menter, F. R.,Eddy Viscosity Transport
    Equations and their Relation to the k-e
    Model.NASA Technical Memorandum 108854, November
    1994.
  • 5 Menter, F. R.,Eddy Viscosity Transport
    Equations and their Relation to the k-e
    Model.ASME J. Fluids Engineering, vol. 119, pp.
    876-884, 1997.

45
Thanks For YourListening
46
END
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com