Coherent Structures in Fluid Mechanics

A special issue of Fluids (ISSN 2311-5521). This special issue belongs to the section "Mathematical and Computational Fluid Mechanics".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 June 2022) | Viewed by 1892

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
School of Engineering and the Built Environment, Birmingham City University, Millennium Point, Birmingham B4 7XG, UK
Interests: flow control; grid control; machine learning; coherent structures

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Although fluid flows have an infinite number of degrees of freedom, they are quite often organized around characteristic coherent structures, which play a key role in both the dynamics and spectral signature of the flow. For this reason, the identification of coherent structures is decisive in understanding the phenomenology and dynamics of fluid flow. 

A coherent structure is generally defined as a spatiotemporally compact region of a flow, associated with a relevant feature for the description of the dynamics, such as the kinetic energy. For instance, modal decompositions, such as dynamic mode decomposition, can be directly connected to the Koopman analysis inherited from the dynamical system theory. Dynamic modes are therefore informative of the dynamical skeleton of a flow. Modal decompositions capture the connections between the coherent structures—the spatial modes—and their time behaviour, and lead to reduced-order models. Lagrangian coherent structures are another popular family of coherent structures. They are related to topological kernels of the fluid flow, such as material surfaces. Such structures hence govern the flow transport, and, without them, understanding mixing, residence time, or exchange in complex biological flows would be challenging.

There are many other families of coherent structures that are of decisive importance in many applications, ranging from the understanding of the transition to turbulence to predictive models and flow control.

Applications of existing methodologies and development of new methodologies for the identification of coherent structures go hand in hand with the understanding and control of engineering fluid flows. 

This Special Issue will present recent advances in the identification of coherent structures that help us to understand the dynamics of fluid flows and novel methodologies for the identification of such structures.

We invite contributions from academics on the following themes:

  • Coherent structures—investigate the dynamics of fluid flows;
  • Modal analysis—methodology;
  • Lagrangian structures and mixing;
  • Dimensionality reduction via coherent structures;
  • Edge States—chaos and transition;
  • Hairpins, eddies, rollers and streaks—transition to turbulence;
  • Machine learning for the identification of coherent structures;
  • Markovianity and clustering—links to dynamics.

Dr. Florimond Guéniat
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

17 pages, 7518 KiB  
Article
Modal Decomposition Techniques: Application in Coherent Structures for a Saccular Aneurysm Model
by Paulo Yu and Vibhav Durgesh
Fluids 2022, 7(5), 165; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids7050165 - 9 May 2022
Viewed by 1557
Abstract
Aneurysms are localized expansions of blood vessels which can be fatal upon rupture. Studies have shown that aneurysm flows exhibit complex flow phenomena which consist of single or multiple vortical structures that move within the flow cycle. Understanding the complex flow behaviors of [...] Read more.
Aneurysms are localized expansions of blood vessels which can be fatal upon rupture. Studies have shown that aneurysm flows exhibit complex flow phenomena which consist of single or multiple vortical structures that move within the flow cycle. Understanding the complex flow behaviors of aneurysms remain challenging. Thus, the goal of this study is to quantify the flow behavior and extract physical insights into aneurysm flows using advance data decomposition methods, Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) and Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD). The velocity field data were obtained by performing 2D Particle Image Velocimetry (2D PIV) on the mid-plane of an idealized, rigid, saccular aneurysm model. The input flow conditions were set to Rep=50 and 150 for a fixed α=2 using a precisely controlled piston pump system. POD was used to quantify the spatial features of the flows, while DMD was used to obtain insight on the dynamics. The results obtained from POD and DMD showed the capability of both methods to quantify the flow field, with the modes obtained providing different insights into the flow evolution in the aneurysm. The curve-fitting step of the POD time-varying coefficients, and the appropriate selection of DMD modes based on their energy contribution, allowed the mathematical flow models from POD and DMD to reconstruct flow fields at any given time step. This can be used for validation of numerical or computational data. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coherent Structures in Fluid Mechanics)
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