Pressure fluctuations and interfacial robustness in turbulent flows over superhydrophobic surfaces
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 2015•cambridge.org
Superhydrophobic surfaces can entrap gas pockets within their grooves when submerged in
water. Such a mixed-phase boundary is shown to result in an effective slip velocity on the
surface, and has promising potential for drag reduction and energy-saving in hydrodynamic
applications. The target flow regime, in most such applications, is a turbulent flow. Previous
analyses of this problem involved direct numerical simulations of turbulence with the
superhydrophobic surface modelled as a flat boundary, but with a heterogeneous mix of slip …
water. Such a mixed-phase boundary is shown to result in an effective slip velocity on the
surface, and has promising potential for drag reduction and energy-saving in hydrodynamic
applications. The target flow regime, in most such applications, is a turbulent flow. Previous
analyses of this problem involved direct numerical simulations of turbulence with the
superhydrophobic surface modelled as a flat boundary, but with a heterogeneous mix of slip …
Superhydrophobic surfaces can entrap gas pockets within their grooves when submerged in water. Such a mixed-phase boundary is shown to result in an effective slip velocity on the surface, and has promising potential for drag reduction and energy-saving in hydrodynamic applications. The target flow regime, in most such applications, is a turbulent flow. Previous analyses of this problem involved direct numerical simulations of turbulence with the superhydrophobic surface modelled as a flat boundary, but with a heterogeneous mix of slip and no-slip boundary conditions corresponding to the surface texture. Analysis of the kinematic data from these simulations has helped to establish the magnitude of drag reduction for various texture topologies. The present work is the first investigation that, alongside a kinematic investigation, addresses the robustness of superhydrophobic surfaces by studying the load fields obtain from data from direct numerical simulations (DNS). The key questions at the focus of this work are: does a superhydrophobic surface induce a different pressure field compared to a flat surface? If so, how does this difference scale with system parameters, and when does it become significant that it can deform the air–water interface and potentially rapture the entrapped gas pockets? To this end, we have performed DNS of turbulent channel flows subject to superhydrophobic surfaces over a wide range of texture sizes spanning values from and a Weber number based on inner dimensions; We obtain good collapse when all our results are expressed in wall units, independently of the Reynolds number.
Cambridge University Press
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果