A second-order closure is developed for predicting turbulent flows of viscoelastic fluids described by a modified generalised Newtonian fluid model incorporating a nonlinear viscosity that depends on a strain-hardening Trouton ratio as a means to handle some of the effects of viscoelasticity upon turbulent flows. Its performance is assessed by comparing its predictions for fully developed turbulent pipe flow with experimental data for four different dilute polymeric solutions and also with two sets of direct numerical simulation data for fluids theoretically described by the finitely extensible nonlinear elastic - Peterlin model. The model is based on a Newtonian Reynolds stress closure to predict Newtonian fluid flows, which incorporates l...
The velocity and friction properties of laminar pipe flow of a viscoelastic solution are bounded by ...
The performance of different low-Reynolds number turbulence models applied to various flows is descr...
Most flows are turbulent in nature, yet fluids exhibit a plethora of inherent responses to applied s...
Abstract: A second order closure for predicting turbulent flows of viscoelastic fluids is proposed i...
Abstract: The performance of a newly developed low Reynolds number second order closure for viscoela...
Abstract. The new stress term in the time-average momentum equation of the modified generalised Newt...
The development of robust turbulent viscoelastic models to predict drag reducing behaviour of polyme...
Abstract. A low Reynolds number k −ε model was developed for predicting drag reducing turbulent flow...
This article presents a new turbulence closure based on the k-ω SST model for predicting turbulent f...
Direct numerical simulations (DNS) were carried out to investigate turbulent heat transfer in a chan...
The evolution of viscoelastic turbulent models, in the last years, has been significant due to the d...
Based on a generalised Newtonian fluid (GNF) model, modified to account for strain-thickening of the...
A viscoelastic turbulence model in a fully-developed drag reducing channel flow is improved, with tu...
It has been well-known for over six decades that the addition of minute amounts of long polymer chai...
The Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations are still the backbone of numerical flow simula...
The velocity and friction properties of laminar pipe flow of a viscoelastic solution are bounded by ...
The performance of different low-Reynolds number turbulence models applied to various flows is descr...
Most flows are turbulent in nature, yet fluids exhibit a plethora of inherent responses to applied s...
Abstract: A second order closure for predicting turbulent flows of viscoelastic fluids is proposed i...
Abstract: The performance of a newly developed low Reynolds number second order closure for viscoela...
Abstract. The new stress term in the time-average momentum equation of the modified generalised Newt...
The development of robust turbulent viscoelastic models to predict drag reducing behaviour of polyme...
Abstract. A low Reynolds number k −ε model was developed for predicting drag reducing turbulent flow...
This article presents a new turbulence closure based on the k-ω SST model for predicting turbulent f...
Direct numerical simulations (DNS) were carried out to investigate turbulent heat transfer in a chan...
The evolution of viscoelastic turbulent models, in the last years, has been significant due to the d...
Based on a generalised Newtonian fluid (GNF) model, modified to account for strain-thickening of the...
A viscoelastic turbulence model in a fully-developed drag reducing channel flow is improved, with tu...
It has been well-known for over six decades that the addition of minute amounts of long polymer chai...
The Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations are still the backbone of numerical flow simula...
The velocity and friction properties of laminar pipe flow of a viscoelastic solution are bounded by ...
The performance of different low-Reynolds number turbulence models applied to various flows is descr...
Most flows are turbulent in nature, yet fluids exhibit a plethora of inherent responses to applied s...