The sweeping decorrelation hypothesis and energy–inertial scale interaction in high Reynolds number flows
- 1 March 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 248, 493-511
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112093000862
Abstract
The random sweeping decorrelation hypothesis was analysed theoretically and experimentally in terms of the higher-order velocity structure functions $D_{u_i}^{(m)}(r) = \left< [u_i^m(x + r) - u_i^m(x)]^2\right>$. Measurements in two high Reynolds number laboratory shear flows were used: in the return channel (Rλ ≈ 3.2 × 103) and in the mixing layer (Rλ ≈ 2.0 × 103) of a large wind tunnel. Two velocity components (in the direction of the mean flow, u1, and in the direction of the mean shear, u2) were processed for m = 1−4. The effect of using Taylor's hypothesis was estimated by a specially developed method, and found to be insignificant. It was found that all the higher-order structure functions scale, in the inertial subrange, as r2/3. Such a scaling has been argued as supporting evidence for the sweeping hypothesis. However, our experiments also established a strong correlation between energy- and inertial-range excitation. This finding leads to the conclusion that the sweeping decorrelation hypothesis cannot be exactly valid.The hypothesis of statistical independence of large- and small-scale excitation was directly checked with conditionally averaged moments of the velocity difference $\left< [u_i(x + r) - u_i(x)]^l\right>_{u_i^*}, l = 2-4$, at a fixed value of the large-scale parameter u*i. Clear dependence of the conditionally averaged moments on the level of averaging was found. In spite of a strong correlation between the energy-containing and the inertial-scale excitation, universality of the intrinsic structure of the inertial subrange was shown.
Keywords
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