Scaling of wall-pressure--velocity correlations in high Reynolds number turbulent pipe flow
Abstract
An experimental study was conducted in the CICLoPE long-pipe facility to investigate the correlation between wall-pressure and turbulent velocity fluctuations in the logarithmic region, at high friction Reynolds numbers (4\,794 Reτ 47\,015). Hereby we explore the scalability of employing wall-pressure to effectively estimate off-the-wall velocity states (e.g., to be of use in real-time control of wall-turbulence). Coherence spectra for wall-pressure and streamwise (or wall-normal) velocity fluctuations collapse when plotted against λx/y and thus reveals a Reynolds-number-independent scaling with distance-from-the-wall. When the squared wall-pressure fluctuations are considered instead of the linear wall-pressure term, the coherence spectra for the wall-pressure--squared and velocity are higher in amplitude at wavelengths corresponding to large-scale streamwise velocity fluctuations (e.g., at λx/y = 60 the coherence value increases from roughly 0.1 up to 0.3). This higher coherence typifies a modulation effect, because low-frequency content is introduced when squaring the wall-pressure time series. Finally, quadratic stochastic estimation is employed to estimate turbulent velocity fluctuations from the wall-pressure time series only. For each Reτ investigated, the estimated time series and a true temporal measurement of velocity inside the turbulent pipe flow, yield a normalized correlation coefficient of ≈ 0.6 for all cases. This suggests that wall-pressure sensing can be employed for meaningful estimation of off-the-wall velocity fluctuations, and thus for real-time control of energetic turbulent velocity fluctuations at high Reτ applications.
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