Viscous Sublayer and Adjacent Wall Region in Turbulent Pipe Flow
- 1 September 1967
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Physics of Fluids
- Vol. 10 (9) , 1880-1889
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1762382
Abstract
The boundary‐layer research facility utilizing the highly viscous fluid, glycerine, was constructed to permit detailed experimental investigation of the viscous sublayer. At a pipe Reynolds number of 8700 the sublayer thickness corresponding to a nondimensional distance from the wall of yuτ/ν = 5.00 was 0.110 in. Detailed measurements of the streamwise fluctuating velocities were obtained with hot‐film anemometers within the viscous sublayer as well as in the transition region between the linear and logarithmic mean velocity profiles. These data were used to form the space‐time correlation function of the streamwise fluctuating velocities. An eigenfunction decomposition of the streamwise fluctuating velocity into a sum of products of eigenfunctions in the inhomogeneous coordinate direction, with random coefficients dependent on the homogeneous and stationary variables, was obtained from the correlation data. One dominant eigenfunction with a structure nearly identical to the mean velocity in the wall region was found. The dominant large scale structure of the flow in the wall region, obtained with the aid of a mixing length approximation, consisted of randomly distributed counterrotating eddy pairs of elongated streamwise extent.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Influence of Viscous Effects on Impact TubesJournal of Applied Mechanics, 1953