Theory of Turbulent Flows
1. Notations and units
Notation | Quantity | Unit |
---|---|---|
\(\rho\) |
fluid density |
\(kg \cdot m^{-3}\) |
\(\boldsymbol{u}\) |
fluid velocity |
\(m \cdot s^{-1}\) |
\(\boldsymbol{\sigma}\) |
fluid stress tensor |
\(N \cdot m^{-2}\) |
\(\boldsymbol{f}^t\) |
source term |
\(kg \cdot m^{-3} \cdot s^{-1}\) |
\(p\) |
pressure fields |
\(kg \cdot m^{-1} \cdot s^{-2}\) |
\(\mu\) |
dynamic viscosity |
\(kg \cdot m^{-1} \cdot s^{-1}\) |
\(\bar{U}\) |
characteristic inflow velocity |
\(m \cdot s^{-1}\) |
\(\nu\) |
kinematic viscosity |
\(m^2 \cdot s^{-1}\) |
\(L\) |
characteristic length |
\(m\) |
2. Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations
The Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations (or RANS equations) are time-averaged equations of motion for fluid flow. The Reynolds averaging consists to decompose the solution variables of Navier-Stokes equations (like velocity \(\boldsymbol{u}\)) into the mean component (\(\overline{\boldsymbol{u}}\)) and the fluctuating component (\(\boldsymbol{u}^{\prime}\)), which can be written in the following form
2.1. Incompressible case
The incompressible Navier-Stokes equations required to find the velocity \(\boldsymbol{u}\) and the pressure \(p\) which verify following equations
with the stress tensor \(\boldsymbol{\sigma}\)
and strain tensor \(D(\boldsymbol{u})\) :
By substituting the Reynolds decomposition on the velocity and pressure, i.e
into the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations and in computing the Reynolds average of these equations, we can derived Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes in the incompressible case. The RANS probleme corresponds to find \(\overline{\boldsymbol{u}}\) and \(\overline{p}\) such that
These system is very close to the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations exept that we have an additional term \(\rho\ \overline{\left( \boldsymbol{u}^{\prime} \cdot \nabla_{\mathrm{x}} \right) \boldsymbol{u}^{\prime}}\). Then, this extra term can be rewritten (by using the continuity equation of the fluctuation) as