Assessment of RANS models for Rayleigh-Taylor mixing using the Macroscopic Forcing Method
ORAL
Abstract
The Macroscopic Forcing Method (MFM) is a numerical tool for assessing Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) closure operators (Mani & Park, 2021). It specifically can be used to assess nonlocality by measuring moments of the eddy diffusivity kernel of a turbulent flow. Previous work showed that nonlocality should not be neglected in RANS models for Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) mixing using MFM measurements for mean scalar transport in both 2D RT (Lavacot et al, in review) and 3D RT (Lavacot et al, 73rd APS DFD Meeting, 2022). In this talk, the k-L-F model is presented, which incorporates nonlocality of the eddy diffusivity through the addition of an equation for the turbulent scalar flux to the k-L model (Dimonte & Tipton, 2006) based on MFM measurements. By applying MFM to the RANS model itself, this model is evaluated along with the standard k-L model and the BHR-4 model (Braun & Gore, 2021), both of which are used for predicting RT mixing. Assessments are made by comparing the MFM-measured eddy diffusivity moments from the RANS simulations against those from high-fidelity simulations.
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Presenters
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Dana Lynn Lavacot
Stanford University
Authors
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Dana Lynn Lavacot
Stanford University
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Jessie Liu
Stanford University
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Brandon E Morgan
Lawrence Livermore National Lab
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Ali Mani
Stanford University, Standard University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University