Könözsy, László.

A New Hypothesis on the Anisotropic Reynolds Stress Tensor for Turbulent Flows Volume II: Practical Implementation and Applications of an Anisotropic Hybrid k-omega Shear-Stress Transport/Stochastic Turbulence Model / [electronic resource] : by László Könözsy. - 1st ed. 2021. - XXII, 500 p. 146 illus., 128 illus. in color. online resource. - Fluid Mechanics and Its Applications, 125 2215-0056 ; . - Fluid Mechanics and Its Applications, 125 .

Preface -- Dedication -- Acknowledgement -- Introduction -- Implementation Strategies -- Two-Dimensional Classical Examples -- Three-Dimensional Turbulence and Numerical Examples -- Appendix A: Example Codes and Subroutines -- Bibliography.

This self-contained, interdisciplinary book encompasses mathematics, physics, computer programming, analytical solutions and numerical modelling, industrial computational fluid dynamics (CFD), academic benchmark problems and engineering applications in conjunction with the research field of anisotropic turbulence. It focuses on theoretical approaches, computational examples and numerical simulations to demonstrate the strength of a new hypothesis and anisotropic turbulence modelling approach for academic benchmark problems and industrially relevant engineering applications. This book contains MATLAB codes, and C programming language based User-Defined Function (UDF) codes which can be compiled in the ANSYS-FLUENT environment. The computer codes help to understand and use efficiently a new concept which can also be implemented in any other software packages. The simulation results are compared to classical analytical solutions and experimental data taken from the literature. A particular attention is paid to how to obtain accurate results within a reasonable computational time for wide range of benchmark problems. The provided examples and programming techniques help graduate and postgraduate students, engineers and researchers to further develop their technical skills and knowledge.

9783030606039

10.1007/978-3-030-60603-9 doi


Fluid mechanics.
Continuum mechanics.
Computer simulation.
Mathematics—Data processing.
Engineering Fluid Dynamics.
Continuum Mechanics.
Computer Modelling.
Computational Science and Engineering.

TA357-359

620.1064