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Evaluation of Full Reynolds Stress Turbulence Models in FUN3D for Axisymmetric Jet Flow
Author(s) -
Julianne C. Dudek
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aiaa scitech 2022 forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2019-2332
Subject(s) - turbulence , reynolds stress , rotational symmetry , reynolds number , mechanics , jet (fluid) , physics , reynolds stress equation model , k epsilon turbulence model , reynolds decomposition , stress (linguistics) , flow (mathematics) , classical mechanics , k omega turbulence model , reynolds equation , linguistics , philosophy
Two full seven-equation turbulence models available in the FUN3D code are evaluated for their ability to improve the computation of challenging mixing flows encountered in aerospace propulsion. These models are the SSG/LRR and Wilcox full second-moment Reynolds stress models. They solve equations for the six components of the Reynolds stress and a seventh equation for the turbulent length scale. Two standard eddy viscosity models are also evaluated for comparison, the SpalartAllmaras (SA) one-equation model and the Menter Shear Stress Transport (SST-V) two-equation turbulence model. Flow through an axisymmetric reference nozzle is examined at three flow conditions: subsonic unheated, subsonic heated, and near sonic unheated. Centerline profiles of velocity and turbulent kinetic energy and radial profiles of velocity, turbulent kinetic energy and turbulent stresses are examined. Results showed that the SA model did well at predicting the jet potential core length, but over-mixed the downstream flow, whereas the SST-V model over-predicted the potential core length. The Wilcox-model significantly over-predicted the potential core length and under-predicted the mixing and was not well-suited for the jet flows evaluated, however the SSG/LRR Reynolds stress model did well at predicting the mixing rate and mean velocity for all cases examined.

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