Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sathe, A. S., Anderson, W., Calaf, M., Giometto, M. G.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.05889
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866917085249011712
author Sathe, A. S.
Anderson, W.
Calaf, M.
Giometto, M. G.
author_facet Sathe, A. S.
Anderson, W.
Calaf, M.
Giometto, M. G.
contents Secondary flows induced by spanwise heterogeneous surface roughness play a crucial role in determining engineering-relevant metrics such as surface drag, convective heat transfer, and the transport of airborne scalars. While much of the existing literature has focused on idealized configurations with regularly spaced roughness elements, real-world surfaces often feature irregularities, clustering, and topographic complexity for which the secondary flow response remains poorly understood. Motivated by this gap, we investigate multi-column roughness configurations that serve as a regularized analog of roughness clustering. Using large-eddy simulations, we systematically examine secondary flows across a controlled set of configurations in which cluster density and local arrangement are varied in an idealized manner, and observe that these variations give rise to distinct secondary flow polarities. Through a focused parameter study, we identify the spanwise gap between the edge-most roughness elements of adjacent columns, normalized by the channel half-height, as a key geometric factor governing this polarity. In addition to analyzing the time-averaged structure, we investigate how variations in polarity affect the instantaneous dynamics of secondary flows. Here, we find that the regions of high- and low-momentum fluid created by the secondary flows alternate in a chaotic, non-periodic manner over time. Further analysis of the vertical velocity signal shows that variability in vertical momentum transport is a persistent and intrinsic feature of secondary flow dynamics. Taken together, these findings provide a comprehensive picture of how the geometric arrangement of roughness elements governs both the mean structure and temporal behavior of secondary flows.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_05889
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle On the structure and dynamics of secondary flows over multi-column roughness in channel flow
Sathe, A. S.
Anderson, W.
Calaf, M.
Giometto, M. G.
Fluid Dynamics
Secondary flows induced by spanwise heterogeneous surface roughness play a crucial role in determining engineering-relevant metrics such as surface drag, convective heat transfer, and the transport of airborne scalars. While much of the existing literature has focused on idealized configurations with regularly spaced roughness elements, real-world surfaces often feature irregularities, clustering, and topographic complexity for which the secondary flow response remains poorly understood. Motivated by this gap, we investigate multi-column roughness configurations that serve as a regularized analog of roughness clustering. Using large-eddy simulations, we systematically examine secondary flows across a controlled set of configurations in which cluster density and local arrangement are varied in an idealized manner, and observe that these variations give rise to distinct secondary flow polarities. Through a focused parameter study, we identify the spanwise gap between the edge-most roughness elements of adjacent columns, normalized by the channel half-height, as a key geometric factor governing this polarity. In addition to analyzing the time-averaged structure, we investigate how variations in polarity affect the instantaneous dynamics of secondary flows. Here, we find that the regions of high- and low-momentum fluid created by the secondary flows alternate in a chaotic, non-periodic manner over time. Further analysis of the vertical velocity signal shows that variability in vertical momentum transport is a persistent and intrinsic feature of secondary flow dynamics. Taken together, these findings provide a comprehensive picture of how the geometric arrangement of roughness elements governs both the mean structure and temporal behavior of secondary flows.
title On the structure and dynamics of secondary flows over multi-column roughness in channel flow
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.05889