UFR 1-06 Test Case

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Axisymmetric buoyant far-field plume in a quiescent unstratified environment

Underlying Flow Regime 1-06

Test Case

Brief Description of the Study Test Case

The experiments used in this UFR are those of George et al. [3] which were conducted in 1974 at the Factory Mutual Research Corporation and were subsequently repeated by Shabbir & George [34] at the University of Buffalo.

  • Heated air is discharged through a circular orifice into ambient air that is at rest.
  • The plume source temperature is 300°C and the ambient air is 29°C.
  • The source has diameter, D = 6.35 cm.
  • The hot air is discharged at a velocity of U0 = 67 cm/s with a approximately a top-hat profile.
  • Temperature and velocity fluctuations at the inlet are less than 0.1%.
  • George et al. [3] present experimentally measured profiles

of both mean and fluctuating components of the temperature and axial velocity in the self-similar region at x/D = 8, 12 and 16 above the source.

Test Case Experiments

The experiments used in this UFR are those of George et al[3] which were conducted in 1974 at the Factory Mutual Research Corporation and were subsequently repeated by Shabbir & George [34] at the University of Buffalo.


The general arrangement is shown in Figure 4. Compressed air is passed through a set of heaters and porous mesh screens before exiting through a nozzle into the enclosure. The nozzle is stated as a 15:1 contraction in [3], a 12:1 contraction in [sg92] and appears to be different again in a drawing of the arrangement in [3] (see Figure 5). It resulted in a velocity profile through the exit which was uniform to within 2% outside the wall boundary layer. The velocity and temperature fluctuations at the exit were measured to be very low, less than 0.1% in [3] and 0.5% in [34]. The temperature of the source was 300°C and the ambient environment 29°C. Both were controlled to an accuracy of within 1°C. The discharge velocity was 67 cm/s, as calculated from the measured heat flux. These source conditions corresponded to Reynolds number, Re0 = 870, and densimetric Froude number, Fr0 = 1.23 [1] There was no evidence of laminar flow behaviour at a position two inlet diameters downstream from the source. The effective origin of the plume, x0, was found to be at the same location as the exit (see [3] for details of how this was determined).


The screen enclosure around the plume exit was 2.44 × 2.44 metres in cross-section and 2.44 metres high (there is, presumably, an error in [3] which suggests that the enclosure is 2.44 × 2.44 × 2.44 mm). In the later Shabbir & George experiments, a 2 × 2 × 5 metre enclosure was used. The purpose of the screens was to minimize the effect of cross-draughts and other disturbances affecting the flow. Two-wire probes were used by George et al[3] to record velocities and temperature.

[#sdfootnote1anc 1]The densimetric Froude number is calculated here from the source and ambient temperatures, the exit velocity and source diameter given by George et al. [gat77], using Equation (1). However, George et al. [gat77] stated that the densimetric Froude number was 1.4. It is unclear how they determined this value. Using the approach taken by Chen & Rodi [cr80] in which the source density instead of the ambient density is used to make the density difference dimensionless, and Froude number is defined using the square of the expression given in Equation (1), this gives a Froude number of 0.80.


UFR1-06 figure5.gif
Figure 5 Schematic of the George et al. [3] experiments, from Shabir & George [11]


UFR1-06 figure6.gif
Figure 6 Schematic of the plume generator used in the experiments, from George et al. [3]


George et al[3] reported that measurement errors, stemming from directional ambiguity of the hot wire and its thermal inertia, were around 3% for the velocity and lower for other mean and RMS values. The frequency response of the hot wires was estimated to be around 300 Hz compared to the frequency of the energy-containing eddies at around 50 Hz and the Kolmogorov microscale at 1 Khz. It was noted that measurement errors were likely to be higher on the outer edge of the plume where the velocity fluctuations were higher.


In their review of plume experiments, Chen & Rodi [1] noted that the data from George et al. differed significantly from earlier measurements by Rouse et al[64]. However, they considered it to be more reliable due to its use of more sophisticated instrumentation. George [40], describes an experimental program at the University of Buffalo that was set up following publication of the original George et al. [3] paper to investigate possible causes of differences in experimental plume results. Possible sources of errors discussed included:

  • ambient thermal stratification
  • the size of the enclosure
  • the use of porous screens used to minimise disturbances from the far-field affected the plume source.
  • hot wire measurement errors


The most significant concern was ambient thermal stratification. One of the features of buoyant plumes in neutral environments is that the integral of the buoyancy across the whole cross-section of the plume, F, should remain constant and equal to the buoyancy added at the source, F0. George [40] discussed how thermal stratification involving small temperature differences of the order of 1°C across a 3 metre vertical span would be sufficient to cause F to decrease to only 50% of the source value. This would be likely to cause differences in measured temperature and velocity plume profiles.


In the initial experiments of George et al[3], the thermal stratification was not strictly controlled. However, results from later experiments published in the PhD thesis of Shabbir [32] (reproduced in  [34] and  [40]), which conserved buoyancy to within 10%, are in good agreement with the earlier results from George et al[3]. This suggests that, perhaps fortunately, ambient thermal stratification did not contaminate the George et al[3] results significantly.


A summary of the original results from George et al[3] and those reproduced later by Shabbir & George [11] is presented in Table 3. Also shown are the recommended values from Chen & Rodi's review [1] and other studies. The parameters given in Table 3 relate to the following empirical formulae for the mean vertical velocity:


and effective buoyancy acceleration:


where and are Gaussian functions:


The parameters, and are the dimensionless half-widths of the plume, as defined by the location where the normalized buoyancy or mean velocity falls to half its centreline value. The RMS temperature and axial velocity fluctuations normalized by their centreline mean values are denoted, and , respectively.


As noted earlier, Dai&nbspet al. [10][37] [38][39][41] disputed the accuracy of the George et al. [3] experiments and suggested that they had made measurements too near the source, before the plume had reached a fully-developed state. Their arguments are disregarded by Shabbir & George [11] [34].


Table 3 Summary of mean flow parameters and turbulence intensities, from Shabbir & George [11]
UFR1-06 table3.gif

CFD Methods

Van Maele & Merci: Description of CFD Work

Numerical Methods

Van Maele & Merci [2] used the finite-volume-based commercial CFD code, Fluent, to simulate the plume experiments of George et al. [3]. For the discretization of the convective terms in the momentum, turbulence and energy equations a second-order upwind scheme was used. Diffusion terms were discretized using second-order central differences and the SIMPLE algorithm was used for pressure-velocity coupling. The flow was treated as axisymmetric and elliptic calculations were performed used a Cartesian grid arrangement.


The low-Mach-number form of the Favre-averaged Navier-Stokes equations were used. In this weakly-compressible approach, the density is treated as only a function of temperature and not pressure. Pressure only affects the flow field through the pressure-gradient term in the momentum equations. The ideal gas law is used to link the mean density, , to mean temperature, T as follows:



where p* is taken as constant and equal to the atmospheric pressure. The low-Mach-number approximation implies that the effect of the mean kinetic energy and the work done by viscous stresses and pressure are negligible in the energy equation.

Turbulence Modelling

Two turbulence models were used by Van Maele & Merci [2]: the standard k – ε model of Jones & Launder [65] and the realizable k – ε model of Shih et al. [66]. In the former model, the eddy viscosity is given by:



where cμ is a constant equal to 0.09 and the standard k and ε equations are written:




where cε1 = 1.44, cε2 = 1.92, σk = 1.0, σε = 1.3 and Pk is the production term due to mean shear. The terms G and SεB are source terms related to the influence of buoyancy on the k and ε equations. The treatment of these gterms is discussed below.


The Shih et al. [66] model involves two changes to the standard k – ε model. Firstly, cμ is made a function of strain and vorticity invariants to ensure that the model always returns positive normal Reynolds stresses and satisfies the Schwarz inequality for the turbulent shear stresses. The function form of cμ is given by:



where:



and A0 is a constant equal to 4.04.


Secondly, a different ε-equation is used to resolve the problem of the round-jet/plane-jet anomaly (see Pope [67]):




where S is the strain-rate invariant as before, cε2 = 1.9, σk = 1.0 and σε = 1.3.


The Shih et al. [66] model was developed for high Reynolds number turbulent flows and therefore a zonal or wall-function approach must be used to bridge the viscous sub-layer near walls. Compared to the standard k–ε model, it has been shown to produce improved behaviour in a number of free shear flows, boundary-layer flows and a backward-facing step flow [66]. One of the major weaknesses of the standard k–ε model is that it produces too much turbulent kinetic energy at stagnation points [68]. The Shih et al. model should in principle suffer less from this weakness since the functional form of cμ should reduce the over-production of k. However, its overall performance in stagnating flows will depend on the type of wall model used.

Production due to Buoyancy, G

The term G in the k-equation relates to the influence of buoyancy on the turbulent kinetic energy, and is given by:



where gj is the gravitational acceleration vector. In stably stratified flows, where the temperature increases with height, G is negative. Conversely, in unstably stratified flows, where temperature decreases with height, G is positive and acts to increase k. The unknown density-velocity   correlation, , must be modelled. The most common approximation of this term is the so-called Boussinesq Simple Gradient Diffusion Hypothesis (SGDH):



The production due to buoyancy using SGDH is then as follows:



In their paper, Van Maele & Merci [2] erroneously included an additional pressure-gradient term in Equation (23) related to the pressure-work rather than buoyancy (see Wilcox [69]). Since the term is negligible in incompressible flows, such as the buoyant plumes considered here, it has therefore been ignored. The ratio of the reference density to the mean density, , appears in Equation (23) due to the use of a non-Boussinesq approach and Favre-averaging, which are discussed later. Van Maele & Merci [2] assumed that σt   was constant and equal to 0.85.


Instead of writing the buoyancy production in terms of the density-velocity correlation, , the equation can be written in terms of the heat flux, :


and the G term is then written:


where t′ is the temperature fluctuation, T is the mean temperature and β is the volumetric expansion coefficient, . Other equivalent expressions can also be formulated using the ideal gas law and the assumption that density is only a function of temperature, not pressure (the low-Mach-number approximation). The conversion from mean density to temperature gradients is then as follows:



The SGDH model predicts zero density-velocity correlation or heat flux components ( or ) in situations were the density or temperature gradients are zero in that direction. However, as Ince & Launder [70] noted, in a simple shear flow in which there are only cross-stream temperature gradients, the heat flux in the streamwise direction actually exceeds that in the cross-stream direction. This shortcoming of the SGDH model was confirmed by the analysis of Shabbir & Taulbee [33], who showed that the model significantly underestimates the magnitude of the heat flux in vertical buoyant plumes. The underprediction of or by the SGDH model leads to an overly-small production term, G, and hence a turbulent kinetic energy, k, which is too small, producing too little mixing in the modelled plume. The study by Yan & Holmstedt [53] provides a clear example of how the k – ε model with SGDH produces buoyant plumes which are too narrow and with overly high temperatures and velocities in the core of the flow.


Van Maele & Merci [2] examined a different model for G based on the the Generalized-Gradient Diffusion Hypothesis (GGDH) of Daly & Harlow [52]. This was first used in the context of practical CFD calculations with the k – ε model by Ince & Launder [70], and is written as follows:



which Van Maele & Merci [2] expressed as follows:



again with σt = 0.85. As previously, Van Maele & Merci [2] included a pressure-gradient term in the above equation related to pressure-work but this can effectively be ignored in the present application. The advantage of the GGDH approach is that transverse density gradients affect the production term.


In their plume simulations, Van Maele & Merci [2] used a slightly modified form of the above relation. They replaced the normal stress in the streamwise (vertical) direction, , with the turbulent kinetic energy, k. They justified this on the basis that the k – ε model gives poor predictions of normal stresses in plumes. Experimental measurements indicate that the streamwise normal stress is approximately twice the magnitude of the transverse components (i.e. ) whereas the k – ε model predicts them to be roughly equal. Since k can be approximated from and the k – ε model predicts , they suggest that it is more appropriate to use k rather than , to artificially increase the stress to a more realistic value. This ad-hoc correction may not be appropriate in more complex flows where the gravitational vector is not aligned to the Cartesian axes.


A simplification frequently made to the buoyancy treatments described above is to assume that the mean density is equal to the reference density, , an approach known as the Boussinesq approximation. For the SGDH written in terms of temperature gradients, this gives:



Van Maele & Merci [2] examined the effect of this simplification on the prediction of the George et al. [3] buoyant plume experiments.

Buoyancy Source Term in the ε–Equation, SεB

The buoyancy source term, SεB, in the ε–equation is given by:



Unlike other model constants in the k – ε model, there is still some controversy over the best value or formula for cε3. Different approaches have been proposed by different researchers, partly depending on whether the flows are horizontal or vertical and whether there is stable or unstable stratification. For a review of the performance of various models, see Rodi [71], Markatos et al. [72] or Worthy et al. [73]. In their paper, Van Maele & Merci [2] provided a summary of the values proposed previously in 20 published papers and, based on analysis of these studies, used a constant value for cε3 of 0.8.

Favre-Averaging

Throughout their paper, Van Maele & Merci [2] refer to Favre-averaged mean velocity, enthalpy and temperature ( and ) instead of the perhaps more familiar Reynolds-averaged values, (U, H and T). The Favre average of a variable , denoted is calculated from:



where overbars represent long time or ensemble averages in the traditional Reynolds-averaged sense. The turbulent stresses appearing in the Favre-averaged Navier-Stokes equations are:



This is the same as the usual Reynolds-averaged stress except that the strain-rate tensor, is now Favre-averaged. The Favre-averaged strain-rate is calculated from:



where the Favre-averaged mean velocity, , is the parameter solved for in the momentum equations.


Even though they solved Favre-averaged transport equations, Van Maele & Merci modelled the buoyancy production term, G, using the Reynolds-averaged stress, not the Favre-averaged stress. Formally, one can expand the Reynolds-averaged stress as follows [74]:



However, it is often assumed that the last two terms in this expansion can be neglected, in which case . This was the approach adopted by Van Maele & Merci [2].


If one replaces all the Favre-averaged quantities in Van Maele & Merci’s equations with Reynolds-averaged quantities (i.e. substitute ~ symbols with ‾ ), their equations appear identical to the incompressible Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations. In terms of the actual coding of the model, the mean quantities in the flow equations can therefore be interpreted as either Reynolds-averaged or Favre-averaged variables. For this reason, the transport equations have been written in this UFR without the Favre-averaged (~) symbols.


In the majority of the other papers reviewed for this UFR, the transport equations are stated as being Reynolds averaged. Hossain & Rodi [8] noted that correlations between fluctuating velocities and fluctuating density are important in combustion applications but are small in comparison to correlations between velocity fluctuations in simple buoyant plumes. Brescianini & Delichatsios [42] also commented that “depending on certain assumptions, the mean quantities ... can be interpreted as either time-averaged or Favre-averaged variables. The differences between these two types of averages is small when compared to the experimental uncertainties for the plumes examined in this study, and as a result, no large distinction is made between the two forms”. In the experiments of O'Hern et al. [75], reviewed for the companion UFR on unsteady plumes, simultaneous measurements were made of velocities and mass fraction. This enabled both Favre-averaged and \ Reynolds-averaged quantities to be derived. O'Hern et al. [75] found that the difference between Favre- and Reynolds-averaged velocities and second-order turbulent statistics was less than the uncertainty in the data throughout the flow field. Further details on Favre-averaging can be found in Chassaing et al. [74].

Boundary Conditions

Van Maele & Merci [2] modelled the plume source using a diameter, D0 , of 6.35 cm, an inlet temperature of 573 K, an axial velocity of 0.67 m/s, and a turbulence intensity of 0.5\% . To define a value for ε at the inlet, they assumed a turbulence length scale of 4.5 mm, equivalent to D0/15. Around the source, on the radial plane, a wall boundary was specified. The domain was axisymmetric, extending 1 metre in the radial direction and 3 metres in the axial direction. On the side and top boundaries, static pressure conditions were specified to allow the flow into or out of the computational domain. Ambient air entrained through the open boundaries was assumed to have a temperature of 302 K, a turbulent kinetic energy of 10-6m2/s2 and a dissipation rate of 10-9m2/s3. The atmospheric pressure was taken as 101 325 Pa. No tests were undertaken to examine whether the location or conditions of the entrainment boundaries affected the flow solution.

Grid Used

Van Maele & Merci [2] used a 40 × 100 node rectangular grid in the (radial × axial) directions. There were 10 equispaced cells across the source and 30 across the adjacent wall region. The grid was stretched in both the axial and radial directions from the source.

To ensure that results were grid-independent, Van Maele & Merci performed simulations using 80 × 200 and 160 × 400 node grids. The predicted spreading rates and centreline values on the coarsest and finest grids differed by less than 2%. The 40 × 100 grid was therefore considered to provide adequately grid-independent results.

Discussion

The CFD methodology employed by Van Maele & Merci appears to have been performed to a high standard. Details of the modelling and numerical techniques used in their work were recorded clearly in their paper.

They did not show a plot of the grid that was used, however this may have been because it would not have been well reproduced in print and, in any case, the mesh was a simple Cartesian grid arrangement and is adequately described in the text.

The sensitivity of results to the turbulence length scale at the inlet, and to the level of turbulence in the entrained air was not explored, although reasonable approximations appear to have been used for these values. Likewise, the sensitivity to the size of the domain and the entrainment boundaries was not explored.


Notes

  1. The densimetric Froude number is calculated here from the source and ambient temperatures, the exit velocity and source diameter given by George et al[3], using Equation (1). However George et al[3] stated that the densimetric Froude number was 1.4. It is unclear how they determined this value. Using the approach taken by Chen & Rodi [1] in which the source density instead of the ambient density is used to make the density difference dimensionless, and Froude number is defined using the square of the expression given in Equation (1), this gives a Froude number of 0.80.


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Contributed by: Simon Gant — Lea Associates

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