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    AuthorCheng, Wan (1)Gao, Wei (1)Pullin, D. I. (1)Samtaney, Ravi (1)Zhang, W. (1)DepartmentMechanical Engineering Program (1)Physical Sciences and Engineering (PSE) Division (1)JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics (1)KAUST Grant Number
    URF/1/1394-01 (1)
    PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP) (1)Subjectboundary layer separation (1)
    Boundary layers (1)
    turbulence simulation (1)View MoreTypeArticle (1)Year (Issue Date)2017 (1)Item AvailabilityMetadata Only (1)

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    Large-eddy simulation of flow over a cylinder with from to : a skin-friction perspective

    Cheng, Wan; Pullin, D. I.; Samtaney, Ravi; Zhang, W.; Gao, Wei (Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017-05-05) [Article]
    We present wall-resolved large-eddy simulations (LES) of flow over a smooth-wall circular cylinder up to , where is Reynolds number based on the cylinder diameter and the free-stream speed . The stretched-vortex subgrid-scale (SGS) model is used in the entire simulation domain. For the sub-critical regime, six cases are implemented with . Results are compared with experimental data for both the wall-pressure-coefficient distribution on the cylinder surface, which dominates the drag coefficient, and the skin-friction coefficient, which clearly correlates with the separation behaviour. In the super-critical regime, LES for three values of are carried out at different resolutions. The drag-crisis phenomenon is well captured. For lower resolution, numerical discretization fluctuations are sufficient to stimulate transition, while for higher resolution, an applied boundary-layer perturbation is found to be necessary to stimulate transition. Large-eddy simulation results at , with a mesh of , agree well with the classic experimental measurements of Achenbach (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 34, 1968, pp. 625-639) especially for the skin-friction coefficient, where a spike is produced by the laminar-turbulent transition on the top of a prior separation bubble. We document the properties of the attached-flow boundary layer on the cylinder surface as these vary with . Within the separated portion of the flow, mean-flow separation-reattachment bubbles are observed at some values of , with separation characteristics that are consistent with experimental observations. Time sequences of instantaneous surface portraits of vector skin-friction trajectory fields indicate that the unsteady counterpart of a mean-flow separation-reattachment bubble corresponds to the formation of local flow-reattachment cells, visible as coherent bundles of diverging surface streamlines.
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