Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow

Turbulence is ubiquitous in naturally-occurring and man-made flows. Despite its importance in scientific and engineering applications, the transition from smooth laminar flow to disorganized turbulent flow is poorly understood. In some cases, the transition can be understood in the context of linear...

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Main Author: Borrero, Daniel
Other Authors: Schatz, Michael F.
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53140
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-531402015-01-29T03:32:56ZSubcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette FlowBorrero, DanielTurbulenceTransition to turbulenceTurbulent spotSubcritical transitionBypass dynamical systemsTomographic particle image velocimetryTurbulence is ubiquitous in naturally-occurring and man-made flows. Despite its importance in scientific and engineering applications, the transition from smooth laminar flow to disorganized turbulent flow is poorly understood. In some cases, the transition can be understood in the context of linear stability theory, which predicts when the underlying laminar solution will become unstable as a parameter is varied. For a large class of flows, however, this approach fails spectacularly, with theory predicting that the laminar flow is stable but experiments and simulations showing the emergence of spatiotemporal complexity. In this dissertation, the direct or subcritical transition to turbulence in Taylor-Couette flow (i.e., the flow between independently rotating co-axial cylinders) is studied experimentally. Chapter 1 discusses different scenarios for the transition to turbulence and recent advances in understanding the subcritical transition within the framework of dynamical systems theory. Chapter 2 presents a comprehensive review of earlier investigations of linearly stable Taylor-Couette flow. Chapter 3 presents the first systematic study of long-lived super-transients in Taylor-Couette flow with the aim of determining the correct dynamical model for turbulent dynamics in the transitional regime. Chapter 4 presents the results of experiments regarding the stability of Taylor-Couette flow to finite-amplitude perturbations in the form of injection/suction of fluid from the test section. Chapter 5 presents numerical investigations of axisymmetric laminar states with realistic boundary conditions. Chapter 6 discusses in detail the implementation of time-resolved tomographic particle image velocimetry (PIV) in the Taylor-Couette geometry and presents preliminary tomographic PIV measurements of the growth of turbulent spots from finite-amplitude perturbations. The main results are summarized in Chapter 7.Georgia Institute of TechnologySchatz, Michael F.2015-01-22T20:01:30Z2015-01-22T20:01:30Z2014-12Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/53140en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Turbulence
Transition to turbulence
Turbulent spot
Subcritical transition
Bypass dynamical systems
Tomographic particle image velocimetry
spellingShingle Turbulence
Transition to turbulence
Turbulent spot
Subcritical transition
Bypass dynamical systems
Tomographic particle image velocimetry
Borrero, Daniel
Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow
description Turbulence is ubiquitous in naturally-occurring and man-made flows. Despite its importance in scientific and engineering applications, the transition from smooth laminar flow to disorganized turbulent flow is poorly understood. In some cases, the transition can be understood in the context of linear stability theory, which predicts when the underlying laminar solution will become unstable as a parameter is varied. For a large class of flows, however, this approach fails spectacularly, with theory predicting that the laminar flow is stable but experiments and simulations showing the emergence of spatiotemporal complexity. In this dissertation, the direct or subcritical transition to turbulence in Taylor-Couette flow (i.e., the flow between independently rotating co-axial cylinders) is studied experimentally. Chapter 1 discusses different scenarios for the transition to turbulence and recent advances in understanding the subcritical transition within the framework of dynamical systems theory. Chapter 2 presents a comprehensive review of earlier investigations of linearly stable Taylor-Couette flow. Chapter 3 presents the first systematic study of long-lived super-transients in Taylor-Couette flow with the aim of determining the correct dynamical model for turbulent dynamics in the transitional regime. Chapter 4 presents the results of experiments regarding the stability of Taylor-Couette flow to finite-amplitude perturbations in the form of injection/suction of fluid from the test section. Chapter 5 presents numerical investigations of axisymmetric laminar states with realistic boundary conditions. Chapter 6 discusses in detail the implementation of time-resolved tomographic particle image velocimetry (PIV) in the Taylor-Couette geometry and presents preliminary tomographic PIV measurements of the growth of turbulent spots from finite-amplitude perturbations. The main results are summarized in Chapter 7.
author2 Schatz, Michael F.
author_facet Schatz, Michael F.
Borrero, Daniel
author Borrero, Daniel
author_sort Borrero, Daniel
title Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow
title_short Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow
title_full Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow
title_fullStr Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow
title_full_unstemmed Subcritical Transition to Turbulence in Taylor-Couette Flow
title_sort subcritical transition to turbulence in taylor-couette flow
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53140
work_keys_str_mv AT borrerodaniel subcriticaltransitiontoturbulenceintaylorcouetteflow
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