Turbulent viscosity profile of drag reducing rod-like polymers

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Abstract

Abstract.: Recent theories of drag reduction in wall turbulence assumed that the presence of the polymer leads to an effective viscosity, which increases linearly with the distance from the wall. Such a linear viscosity profile reduces the Reynolds stress (i.e., the momentum flux to the wall), which leads to drag reduction. For the usual flexible polymers employed in drag reduction, the effective viscosity is however a strongly non-linear effect that is difficult to quantify. We therefore investigate the turbulent drag reduction characteristics of a stiff rod-like polymer for which any effective viscosity changes are only due to the orientation of the polymers. The results show that close to the walls the polymers orient and the viscosity is low, whereas in the bulk the polymers are randomly oriented and the effective viscosity is high. This indeed leads to a reduction of the Reynolds stress and hence to a drag reduction. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

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Kulmatova, D., Hadri, F., Guillou, S., & Bonn, D. (2018). Turbulent viscosity profile of drag reducing rod-like polymers. European Physical Journal E, 41(12). https://doi.org/10.1140/epje/i2018-11751-3

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