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Autori principali: Nicholas, Shane, Omidyeganeh, Mohammad, Pinelli, Alfredo, Monti, Alessandro, Rota, Giulio Foggi, Rosti, Marco E.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.26537
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author Nicholas, Shane
Omidyeganeh, Mohammad
Pinelli, Alfredo
Monti, Alessandro
Rota, Giulio Foggi
Rosti, Marco E.
author_facet Nicholas, Shane
Omidyeganeh, Mohammad
Pinelli, Alfredo
Monti, Alessandro
Rota, Giulio Foggi
Rosti, Marco E.
contents Inspired by the spontaneous behaviour observed in filamentous layers -- where the balance between flow-induced drag and structural elasticity dictates the filaments' equilibrium streamlined posture -- we perform a series of large-eddy simulations to investigate how filament inclination affects turbulent shear flows developing both above and within a canopy of filaments. We examine six distinct filament inclination angles ranging from 0°to 90°. The in-plane solid fraction and filament length are chosen to achieve a fully dense canopy at zero inclination, and these parameters remain constant throughout our study. By setting a nominal bulk Reynolds number of 6000, we provide a detailed statistical characterisation of the turbulent flow. Our findings illustrate distinct changes in the flow regime with varying filament inclination. At lower angles, the canopy remains dense and significantly influences the flow, conforming to a classical canopy-flow regime. However, as the inclination approaches 90°, the intra-canopy region progressively becomes shielded from the outer flow. Remarkably, at 90°inclination, the flow drag reduces significantly, and the total drag becomes lower than that typically seen in an open, filament-free flow. We document this transition from a canopy-dominated regime to a scenario where the canopy becomes largely sheltered from the outer turbulent flow, highlighting key alterations in intra-canopy dynamics as filament inclination increases. Our observations are substantiated by an analysis of the velocity spectra, providing deeper insight into the interactions between the canopy and the developing turbulent boundary layer.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_26537
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Filament inclination effect on turbulent canopy flows
Nicholas, Shane
Omidyeganeh, Mohammad
Pinelli, Alfredo
Monti, Alessandro
Rota, Giulio Foggi
Rosti, Marco E.
Fluid Dynamics
Inspired by the spontaneous behaviour observed in filamentous layers -- where the balance between flow-induced drag and structural elasticity dictates the filaments' equilibrium streamlined posture -- we perform a series of large-eddy simulations to investigate how filament inclination affects turbulent shear flows developing both above and within a canopy of filaments. We examine six distinct filament inclination angles ranging from 0°to 90°. The in-plane solid fraction and filament length are chosen to achieve a fully dense canopy at zero inclination, and these parameters remain constant throughout our study. By setting a nominal bulk Reynolds number of 6000, we provide a detailed statistical characterisation of the turbulent flow. Our findings illustrate distinct changes in the flow regime with varying filament inclination. At lower angles, the canopy remains dense and significantly influences the flow, conforming to a classical canopy-flow regime. However, as the inclination approaches 90°, the intra-canopy region progressively becomes shielded from the outer flow. Remarkably, at 90°inclination, the flow drag reduces significantly, and the total drag becomes lower than that typically seen in an open, filament-free flow. We document this transition from a canopy-dominated regime to a scenario where the canopy becomes largely sheltered from the outer turbulent flow, highlighting key alterations in intra-canopy dynamics as filament inclination increases. Our observations are substantiated by an analysis of the velocity spectra, providing deeper insight into the interactions between the canopy and the developing turbulent boundary layer.
title Filament inclination effect on turbulent canopy flows
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.26537