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Turbulent transition in a channel with superhydrophobic walls: the effect of roughness anisotropy

Superhydrophobic surfaces dramatically reduce skin friction of overlying liquid flows. These surfaces are complex and numerical simulations usually rely on models for reducing this complexity. One of the simplest consists in finding an equivalent boundary condition through an homogenisation procedure, which in the case of channel flow over oriented riblets, leads to the presence of a small spanwise component in the homogenized base flow velocity. This work aims at investigating the influence of such a three-dimensionality of the base flow on stability and transition in a channel with walls covered by oriented riblets. Linear stability for this base flow is investigated: a new instability region, linked to cross-flow effects, is observed. Tollmien-Schlichting waves are also retrieved but the most unstable are three-dimensional. Transient growth is also affected as oblique streaks with non-zero streamwise wavenumber become the most amplified perturbations. When transition is induced by Tollmien-Schlichting waves, after an initial exponential growth regime, streaky structures with large spanwise wavenumber rapidly arise. Modal mechanisms appear to play a leading role in the development of these structures and a secondary stability analysis is realised to retrieve successfully some of their characteristics. The second scenario, initiated with crossflow vortices, displays a strong influence of nonlinearities. The flow develops into large quasi spanwise-invariant structures before breaking down to turbulence. Secondary stability on the saturated cross-flow vortices sheds light on this stage of transition. In both cases, cross-flow effects dominate the flow dynamics, suggestings the need to consider these effects when modelling superhydrophobic surfaces.

preprint2022arXivOpen access

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