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Large-scale structures in high Reynolds number rotating Waleffe flow (1903.10652v3)

Published 26 Mar 2019 in physics.flu-dyn

Abstract: We perform direct numerical simulations of rotating turbulent Waleffe flow, the flow between two parallel plates with a sinusoidal streamwise shear driving force, to study the formation of large-scale structures and the mechanisms for momentum transport. We simulate different cyclonic and anti-cyclonic rotations in the range of dimensionless rotation numbers (inverse Rossby numbers) $R_\Omega$ $\in$ $[-0.16, 2.21]$, and fix the Reynolds number to $Re=3.16\times 103$, large enough such that the shear transport is almost entirely due to Reynolds stresses and viscous transport is negligible. We find an optimum rotation in anti-cyclonic regime at $R_\Omega=0.63$, where a given streamwise momentum transport in the wall-normal direction is achieved with minimum mean energy of the streamwise flow. We link this optimal transport to the strength of large scale structures, as was done in plane Couette by Brauckmann & Eckhardt (J. Fluid Mech., 815, 2017). Furthermore, we explore the large-scale structures and their behaviour under spanwise rotation, and find disorganized large structures at $R_\Omega =0$ but highly organized structures in the anti-cyclonic regime, similar to the rolls in rotating plane Couette and turbulent Taylor Couette flow. We compare the large scale structures of plane Couette flow and Waleffe flow, and observe that the streamwise vorticity is localized inside the cores of the rolls. We show that the rolls take energy from the mean flow at long time-scales, and relate these structures to eigenvalues of the streamfunction.

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