Turbulent Mixing in Nonreactive and Reactive Flows

Turbulence, mixing and the mutual interaction of turbulence and chemistry continue to remain perplexing and impregnable in the fron­ tiers of fluid mechanics. The past ten years have brought enormous advances in computers and computational techniques on the one hand and in measurements and data proc...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Murthy, S. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, NY Springer US 1975, 1975
Edition:1st ed. 1975
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Turbulent Mixing in Nonreactive and Reactive Flows  |h Elektronische Ressource  |c edited by S. Murthy 
250 |a 1st ed. 1975 
260 |a New York, NY  |b Springer US  |c 1975, 1975 
300 |a XVI, 464 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a Turbulent Mixing in Non-Reactive and Reactive Flows: A Review -- Turbulence Modeling: Solved and Unsolved Problems -- On the Modeling of the Scalar-Correlations Necessary to Construct a Second-Order Closure Description of Turbulent Flow -- Computational Studies of Turbulent Flows with Chemical Reaction -- Recent Advances in Theoretical Descriptions of Turbulent Diffusion Flames -- Turbulent Mixing in Systems with Simple Reactions -- Turbulent Mixing Studies in a Chemical Reactor -- Comments on Unmixedness -- Velocity and Pressure Characterization of Coaxial Jets -- A Probability Distribution Function for Turbulent Flows -- Mixing in “Complex” Turbulent Flows -- Coherent Structures in Turbulence -- Large Scale Motion in Turbulent Boundary Layers -- Some Remarks on Synthetic Turbulent Boundary Layer -- Progress and Problems in Understanding Turbulent Shear Flows -- Ensemble-Averaged Large Scale Structure in the Turbulent Mixing Layer -- Some Observations on the Mechanism of Entrainment -- Supersonic Free Turbulent Mixing Layers -- Studies Related to Turbulent Flows Involving Fast Chemical Reactions -- Diffusion-Limited First and Second Order Chemical Reactions in a Turbulent Shear Layer -- On Turbulence Structure and Mixing Mechanism in Free Turbulent Shear Flows -- Conditional (Point-Averaged) Temperature and Velocities in a Heated Turbulent Plane -- Diffusion from a Periodically Heated Line-Source Segment and Its Application to Measurements in Turbulent Flows -- General Discussion -- List of Attendees 
653 |a Classical and Continuum Physics 
653 |a Continuum physics 
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520 |a Turbulence, mixing and the mutual interaction of turbulence and chemistry continue to remain perplexing and impregnable in the fron­ tiers of fluid mechanics. The past ten years have brought enormous advances in computers and computational techniques on the one hand and in measurements and data processing on the other. The impact of such capabilities has led to a revolution both in the understanding of the structure of turbulence as well as in the predictive methods for application in technology. The early ideas on turbulence being an array of complicated phenomena and having some form of reasonably strong coherent struc­ ture have become well substantiated in recent experimental work. We are still at the very beginning of understanding all of the aspects of such coherence and of the possibilities of incorporating such structure into the analytical models for even those cases where the thin shear layer approximation may be valid. Nevertheless a distinguished body of "eddy chasers" has come into existence. The structure of mixing layers which has been studied for some years in terms of correlations and spectral analysis is also getting better understood. Both probability concepts such as intermittency and conditional sampling as well as the concept of large scale structure and the associated strain seem to indicate possibilities of distinguishing and synthesizing 'engulfment' and molecular mixing