Turbulence

Most fluid flows of engineering interest are characterized by irregularly fluctuating flow quantities. Often these fluctuations are at such small scales and high frequencies that resolving them in time and space comes at excessive computational costs. Instead of solving for the exact governing equations of turbulent flows (Direct Numerical Simulation), it is less expensive to solve for averaged or filtered quantities and approximate the impact of the small fluctuating structures. Turbulence models provide different approaches for modeling these structures.

The turbulence models that are implemented in Simcenter STAR-CCM+ can be subdivided into two categories:

  • Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes turbulence models
  • Scale-resolving simulations

It is generally recognised that all existing turbulence models are approximate representations of the physical phenomena of turbulence. The degree of approximation in a given model depends on the nature of the flow to which it is applied. The characterization of the circumstances which give rise to 'good' and 'bad' performance must be based mainly on experience.