UFR 1-07 Best Practice Advice
Unsteady Near-Field Plumes
Underlying Flow Regime 1-07
Best Practice Advice
Best Practice Advice for the UFR
Key Physics
The key physics of this UFR is the transient, unsteady behaviour in the near-field of a turbulent buoyant helium-air plume. The flow features two key instabilities. Firstly, the Rayleigh-Taylor instability related to the presence of dense fluid above less-dense fluid, which gives rise to fingers or spikes of dense fluid separated by rising bubbles of lighter fluid. Secondly, the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability related to the shear-layer interface between the rising plume and the ambient fluid, which produces roll-up vortex sheets on the boundary between the two layers of fluid travelling at different velocities. The flow is very challenging to predict using CFD, due to the sharp density gradients at the plume exit which produce flow conditions where small scales of turbulent motion feed into the larger scales.
Numerical Modelling
Physical Modelling
Application Uncertainties
Recommendations for further work
Contributed by: Simon Gant — UK Health & Safety Laboratory
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