Generation of Atmospheric Turbulence with Unprecedentedly Large Reynolds Number in a Wind Tunnel
Lars Neuhaus, Michael Hölling, Wouter J. T. Bos, Joachim Peinke
Abstract
Generating laboratory flows resembling atmospheric turbulence is of prime importance to study the effect of wind fluctuations on objects such as buildings, vehicles, or wind turbines. A novel driving of an active grid following a stochastic process is used to generate velocity fluctuations with correlation lengths, and, thus, integral scales, much larger than the transverse dimension of the wind tunnel. The combined action of the active grid and a modulation of the fan speed allows one to generate a flow characterized by a four-decade inertial range and an integral scale Reynolds number of 2×10^{7}.
Topics & Concepts
TurbulenceReynolds numberPhysicsWind tunnelWind speedMechanicsMeteorologyFlow (mathematics)Turbulence kinetic energyFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsWind and Air Flow StudiesAerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet Flows