The three-dimensional incompressible flow past a rectangular two-dimensional shallow cavity in a channel is investigated using large-eddy simulation (LES). The aspect ratio (length/depth) of the cavity is $L/D\,{=}\,2$ and the Reynolds number defined with the cavity depth and the mean velocity in the upstream channel is 3360. The sensitivity of the flow around the cavity to the characteristics of the upstream flow is studied by considering two extreme cases: a developing laminar boundary layer upstream of the cavity and when the upstream flow is fully turbulent. The two simulations are compared in terms of the mean statistics and temporal physics of the flow, including the dynamics of the coherent structures in the region surrounding the cavity. For the laminar inflow case it is found that the flow becomes unstable but remains laminar as it is convected over the cavity. Due to the three-dimensional flow instabilities and the interaction of the jet-like flow inside the recirculation region with the separated shear layer, the spanwise vortices that are shed regularly from the leading cavity edge are disturbed in the spanwise direction and, as they approach the trailing-edge corner, break into an array of hairpin-like vortices that is convected downstream the cavity close to the channel bottom. In the fully turbulent inflow case in which the momentum thickness of the incoming boundary layer is much larger compared to the laminar inflow case, the jittering of the shear layer on top of the cavity by the incoming near-wall coherent structures strongly influences the formation and convection of the eddies inside the separated shear layer. The mass exchange between the cavity and the main channel is investigated by considering the ejection of a passive scalar that is introduced instantaneously inside the cavity. As expected, it is found that the ejection is faster when the incoming flow is turbulent due to the interaction between the turbulent eddies convected from upstream of the cavity with the separated shear layer and also to the increased diffusion induced by the broader range of scales that populate the cavity. In the turbulent case it is shown that the eddies convected from upstream of the cavity can play an important role in accelerating the extraction of high-concentration fluid from inside the cavity. For both laminar and turbulent inflow cases it is shown that the scalar ejection can be described using simple dead-zone theory models in which a single-valued global mass exchange coefficient can be used to describe the scalar mass decay inside cavity over the whole ejection process.
This paper reports velocity measurement data in the interaction region between the impeller and vaned diffuser and the results of numerical flow simulation of the whole machine (impeller, vaned diffuser and volute) of a single stage centrifugal fan. Two-dimensional instantaneous velocity measurement is done using particle image velocimetry (PIV). Numerical simulation of impeller-diffuser-volute interaction is performed using CFX-Tascflow commercial code. A frozen rotor simulation model is used for the steady calculation and a rotor-stator simulation model is used for the unsteady calculation using the steady results as an initial guess. The simulation results show that the separated flow regime near the diffuser hub extends to the volute. Comparison between the unsteady computation and those of measurement indicates that the rotor/stator model employed in the simulation predicts essential characteristics of unsteady flow in the centrifugal fan. However, quantitative agreement remains rather poor.
The three-dimensional (3D) incompressible flow past an open cavity in a channel is predicted using the Spalart–Almaras (SA) and the shear-stress-transport model (SST) based versions of detached eddy simulation (DES). The flow upstream of the cavity is fully turbulent. In the baseline case the length to depth (L∕D) ratio of the cavity is 2 and the Reynolds number ReD=3360. Unsteady RANS (URANS) is performed to better estimate the performance of DES using the same code and meshes employed in DES. The capabilities of DES and URANS to predict the mean flow, velocity spectra, Reynolds stresses, and the temporal decay of the mass of a passive contaminant introduced instantaneously inside the cavity are assessed based on comparisons with results from a well resolved large eddy simulation (LES) simulation of the same flow conducted on a very fine mesh and with experimental data. It is found that the SA-DES simulation with turbulent fluctuations at the inlet gives the best overall predictions for the flow statistics and mass exchange coefficient characterizing the decay of scalar mass inside the cavity. The presence of inflow fluctuations in DES is found to break the large coherence of the vortices shed in the separated shear layer that are present in the simulations with steady inflow conditions and to generate a wider range of 3D eddies inside the cavity, similar to LES. The predictions of the mean velocity field from URANS and DES are similar. However, URANS predictions show poorer agreement with LES and experiment compared to DES for the turbulence quantities. Additionally, simulations with a higher Reynolds number (ReD=33,600) and with a larger length to depth ratio (L∕D=4) are conducted to study the changes in the flow and shear-layer characteristics, and their influence on the ejection of the passive contaminant from the cavity.
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