Closing on wall functions - part 7: starting from a profile
It might happens that one doesn't have a turbulent viscosity profile but actually has just an equilibrium profile for velocity or temperature. More specifically:
with its obvious extension to the velocity case. In order to go back to the framework presented here one should notice that:
from which, it follows that:
which is all that is needed to compute (numerically if not doable analytically) the remaining integrals for non equilibrium and/or TKE production terms.
For the non equilibrium terms this leads to the following:
Hence, integration by parts finally leads to:
Formally, this is the generalized trick that I used here to extend the Reichardt wall law to constant only non equilibrium cases (i.e., i=0).
with its obvious extension to the velocity case. In order to go back to the framework presented here one should notice that:
from which, it follows that:
which is all that is needed to compute (numerically if not doable analytically) the remaining integrals for non equilibrium and/or TKE production terms.
For the non equilibrium terms this leads to the following:
Hence, integration by parts finally leads to:
Formally, this is the generalized trick that I used here to extend the Reichardt wall law to constant only non equilibrium cases (i.e., i=0).
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