1. Introduction
Turbulent flows with rough walls are ubiquitous in nature, and many engineering applications must contend with rough boundaries. The viscous length scales in the flow decrease with increasing Reynolds numbers and, eventually, every surface appears to be rough, even when the roughness is small in absolute scale. Nikuradse (Reference Nikuradse1933) was the first to study how local wall roughness (sand glued to the wall) affects global transport properties in pipe flow. Since then, numerous studies (Chan et al. Reference Chan, MacDonald, Chung, Hutchins and Ooi2018; Rouhi, Chung & Hutchins Reference Rouhi, Chung and Hutchins2019; Ma et al. Reference Ma, Xu, Sung and Huang2020; Modesti et al. Reference Modesti, Endrikat, Hutchins and Chung2021; Jelly et al. Reference Jelly, Ramani, Nugroho, Hutchins and Busse2022) and reviews (Flack & Schultz Reference Flack and Schultz2014; Chung et al. Reference Chung, Hutchins, Schultz and Flack2021) have explored the effects of wall roughness in (pipe or channel) turbulence. Instead of using open-channel or pipe flow with rough walls, we employ a Taylor–Couette (TC) apparatus, which is a closed system with an exact balance between energy input and dissipation. Furthermore, due to its simple geometry and excellent controllability, the TC system offers favourable conditions for both numerical and experimental investigations (Verschoof et al. Reference Verschoof, Zhu, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018; Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verschoof, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018b).
In most experimental and numerical studies, both the inner and outer cylinders of the TC system are smooth surfaces (see Grossmann, Lohse & Sun (Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016) for a comprehensive review). The effects of rough walls have only been investigated in recent decades. According to the shape of rough walls, they can be divided into three categories. The first type of rough wall is the irregular rough surface made by adhering particles randomly on the cylindrical wall (Berghout et al. Reference Berghout, Zhu, Chung, Verzicco, Stevens and Lohse2019, Reference Berghout, Bullee, Fuchs, Scharnowski, Kähler, Chung, Lohse and Huisman2021; Bakhuis et al. Reference Bakhuis, Ezeta, Berghout, Bullee, Tai, Chung, Verzicco, Lohse, Huisman and Sun2020). It was found that the torque can be enhanced by the irregular rough wall, indicating drag enhancement. The second type of rough wall is where the regular roughness is arranged in the way aligned with the mean flow, which is called ‘parallel roughness’. It was found that the parallel grooves result in drag enhancement at relatively high Taylor numbers once the height of roughness is larger than the velocity boundary layer (BL) thickness (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016), which is because the plumes are ejected from the tips of these grooves and the system forms a secondary circulating flow inside the groove. Stronger plume ejections have an enhanced effect on the torque and then lead to drag enhancement. However, the parallel corrugated surface resulted in drag reduction at low Taylor number Ta, whereas drag enhancement was found at high Ta (Ng, Jaiman & Lim Reference Ng, Jaiman and Lim2018; Razzak, Cheong & Lua Reference Razzak, Cheong and Lua2020). Similar findings were also reported in studies employing micro-grooves (Razzak et al. Reference Razzak, Cheong and Lua2020; Xu et al. Reference Xu, Li, Liu, Xiang, Lv, Tan, Zhao, Sun and Duan2023).
The third type is where the roughness is arranged perpendicular to the mean flow, i.e. ‘vertical roughness’. Cadot et al. (Reference Cadot, Couder, Daerr, Douady and Tsinober1997) first reported this rough wall effect on drag by attaching vertical ribs on the inner and outer cylinders. Inspired by their work, Van den Berg et al. (Reference Van den Berg, Doering, Lohse and Lathrop2003) performed further experiments with the same style of roughness by conducting four groups of experiments, i.e. two smooth walls, rough-inner/smooth-outer, smooth-inner/rough-outer and two rough walls. Both studies found that the vertical roughness has a drag enhancement effect on the TC flow due to the extra torque of the rough elements coming from the pressure force. Zhu, Verzicco & Lohse (Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017) carried out a quantitative analysis on the origins of torque at the rough wall and found that the contribution of pressure force to the torque at the rough wall is of prime importance for drag enhancement. Lee et al. (Reference Lee, Chung, Park and Kim2009), Motozawa et al. (Reference Motozawa, Ito, Iwamoto, Kawashima, Ando, Senda, Tsuji and Kawaguchi2013), Zhu et al. (Reference Zhu, Ji, Lou and Qian2018a), Verschoof et al. (Reference Verschoof, Zhu, Bakhuis, Huisman, Verzicco, Sun and Lohse2018) and Sodjavi, Ravelet & Bakir (Reference Sodjavi, Ravelet and Bakir2018) also studied the effects of vertical rough walls, focusing on the effects of the number of vertical strips, the strip height and/or the radius ratio. To date, all studies on the effects of regular rough walls have used symmetrical, rough walls, resulting in the same influences by different rotating directions of the cylinders, whereas the asymmetric effect of different rotating directions with vertical asymmetrical rough walls on the TC flow, which may make a huge difference, remains unexplored.
In this article, direct numerical simulation (DNS) of a TC flow with vertical asymmetrical rough walls is carried out to study how different rotating directions affect the global response as well as local flow behaviour. The manuscript is organized as follows. In § 2, the numerical method and settings are described. In § 3, the relationships between Nusselt number and Taylor number for vertical asymmetrical rough inner walls with different heights and rotating directions are presented, and the mechanism behind the differences in torque is explained. The local flow behaviour is also analysed. Finally, conclusions are drawn in § 4.
2. Numerical method and setting
In the present study, the outer cylinder is at rest, and the inner cylinder is rotating and thus driving the flow. The outer cylinder is a smooth wall and the inner one is a rough wall, with both walls subject to the no-slip boundary condition. Axially periodic boundary conditions are used, meaning that the present study does not include the effects of end walls presented in the TC experiments. The inner cylinder is roughened by attaching eighteen vertical strips of right triangle cross-section where one side of the strips is perpendicular to the inner wall and the strips with a height of $\delta$ are equally distributed in the azimuthal direction (see figure 1). The motivation behind this study is to investigate the impact of asymmetric roughness on torque in the Taylor–Couette system, particularly its effects on turbulent statistics. While there are various possibilities for asymmetric roughness shapes, we focus on the right triangular rib (the simplest asymmetric geometry model) as a starting point to examine the effects on statistics of turbulent Taylor–Couette flow. Our primary objective is to investigate how the presence of asymmetric roughness elements impacts both global transport and local flow statistics in Taylor–Couette turbulence.
For the sake of simplicity and ease of explanation, as illustrated in figure 1(a), the angular velocity of the inner cylinder $\omega _{i} > 0$ represents that the fluid is sheared by the smaller slope side of the strips, referred subsequently as ‘counter-clockwise rotation’. In contrast, $\omega _{i} < 0$ indicates the fluid is sheared by the steeper slope side of the strips, referred subsequently as ‘clockwise rotation’. The gap width (d) is calculated as the difference between the radii of the outer cylinder (${r}_{o}$) and the inner cylinder (${r}_{i}$). The radius ratio is $\eta = {r}_{i}/{r}_{o} = 0.714$ and the aspect ratio is $\varGamma = {L}/{d} = 2 {\rm \pi}/3$, where L is the length of axial periodicity. The geometry of the system is fixed at the radius ratio of $\eta = 0.714$ and the outer cylinder is stationary, to make a direct comparison with previous results (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013; Xu et al. Reference Xu, Zhao, Sun, He and Wang2022). With $\varGamma = 2 {\rm \pi}/3$, we can have a relatively small computational domain with a pair of Taylor vortices. A rotational symmetry of six is selected to reduce the computational cost while not affecting the results, which has been verified by previous studies (Brauckmann & Eckhardt Reference Brauckmann and Eckhardt2013; Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco & Lohse Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2015; Xu et al. Reference Xu, Zhao, Sun, He and Wang2022). As a result, there are only three triangular strips in the azimuthal direction, as shown in figure 1(b).
The fluid between the two cylinders is assumed to be Newtonian and incompressible. The motion of the fluid under these assumptions is governed by the continuity equation,
and the momentum conservation equation (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016),
where ${\boldsymbol {u}}$ and p are the dimensionless fluid velocity and pressure, respectively. The equations are normalized using the gap width d, and the tangential velocity of the inner cylinder ${u}_{i} = {r}_{i} \omega _{i}$, time is normalized by the characteristic length and velocity ${d}/{u}_{i}$, and the pressure term is normalized by the square of inner wall velocity and density $\rho {u}_{i}^{2}$. We also define the non-dimensional radius ${r}^{\ast }$ to be ${r}^{\ast } = ({r} - {r}_{i} )/{d}$. Here, ${f}(\eta )$ is a geometrical factor written in the form (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013; Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016)
The Taylor number can characterize the driving TC flow. In the case of static outer cylinder, it is defined as (Grossmann et al. Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016)
where $\nu$ is the kinematic viscosity of the fluid. An alternative way to determine the system is using the inner Reynolds number that is defined as ${Re}_{i} = {r}_{i} {\omega }_{i} {d}/\nu$, and these two definitions can be interconverted using the formula $Ta = [\,f(\eta )Re_{i}]^{2}$. Both the Reynolds and Taylor numbers are presented in table 1. Moreover, the use of the Taylor number, instead of the Reynolds number, is common for distinguishing different TC flow regimes (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013, Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Van Der Poel, Verzicco, Grossmann and Lohse2014a; Grossmann et al. Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016). In addition, we also provide the Reynolds number for the roughness based on the average azimuthal velocity at the height of the roughness, which is defined as $Re_{\delta } = \delta \bar {u}_{\varphi, r = r_{i}+\delta }/\nu$ and shown in table 1.
In TC flow, the angular velocity flux from the inner cylinder to the outer cylinder is strictly conserved along the radius r (Eckhardt, Grossmann & Lohse Reference Eckhardt, Grossmann and Lohse2007). It is defined as
where ${u}_{r}$ is the radial velocity, $\omega$ is the angular velocity, and $\langle \dots \rangle _{A,t}$ denotes averaging over a cylindrical surface (averaging over the axial and azimuthal directions) with constant distance from the axis and over time. Here, the radius is selected to be within the scope of ${r_{i} }+ \delta \leq {r} \leq {r_{o}}$. Additionally, ${J}^{\omega }$ is connected to the dimensionless torque Nusselt number $Nu_{\omega }$ via
where ${Nu}_{\omega }$ is the key response parameter in TC flow and ${J}^{\omega }_{lam} = 2\nu r_{i}^{2} r_{o}^{2} \omega _{i} /( r_{o}^{2} - r_{i}^{2})$ is the angular velocity flux of the non-vortical laminar state. Note that ${Nu}_{\omega }$ can be connected to the experimentally measurable torque $\tau$ via $\tau = 2 {\rm \pi}l \rho Nu_{\omega } J^{\omega }_{lam}$ by keeping the cylinder rotating with a constant velocity (Grossmann et al. Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016), where l is the height of the part of the cylinder on which the torque is measured and $\rho$ is the fluid density.
Equations (2.1) and (2.2) are solved with a second-order-accuracy, colocated finite-volume method in the Cartesian coordinate system, using OpenFOAM as the computational platform. During the simulations, the results in the Cartesian coordinate are transformed to the format in the cylindrical coordinate, and the simulations are run for at least 40 large eddy turnover times (${d}/{r}_{i} {\omega }_{i}$) for data analysis. The no-slip boundary condition of the inner rough wall was dealt with a second-order-accuracy immersed boundary method (Zhao et al. Reference Zhao, Xu, Ge and Wang2020a,Reference Zhao, Xu, Liu, Ge and Wangb). The temporal term is discretized using the second-order backward scheme and the convective term is discretized using a second-order total variation diminishing (Vanleer) scheme. All simulations are achieved using a fixed time step based on the Courant–Friedrichs–Lewy (CFL) criterion and the CFL number is less than 1.0 in all simulations. More details of the simulation accuracy are shown in Appendix A.
Two different strip heights ($\delta = 0.1{d}$ and $\delta = 0.2{d}$) on the inner cylinder with different rotating directions, i.e. $\omega _{i} > 0$ (counter-clockwise rotation) and $\omega _{i} < 0$ (clockwise rotation), were analysed. In each series with the same strip height, Ta ranges from $10^{3}$ to $10^{7}$ or $Re_{i}$ is varied from 35 to 3960. The parameter space consists of the Taylor number Ta and the strip height $\delta /{d}$, which are shown in figure 2. Note that the vertical solid lines in figure 2 are the transition values of Ta for smooth surfaces in TC flow, and the flow states are $\delta$-dependent. The division of flow state is at a smooth surfaces and the radius ratio $\eta = 0.714$, which is in accordance with the classification methods proposed by Ostilla-Mónico et al. (Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Van Der Poel, Verzicco, Grossmann and Lohse2014a) and Grossmann et al. (Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016), i.e. the determination of the critical Taylor number was based on the onset of Taylor vortices within the TC system.
3. Results
3.1. Dimensionless torque
To study the effect of the triangle strip walls, the dimensionless torque ${Nu}_{\omega }$ is presented as a function of Ta (i.e. ${Nu}_{\omega } ={ATa}^{\beta }$). Figure 3(a) shows the dimensionless torque ${Nu}_{\omega }$ with increasing Ta for a smooth wall and rough wall with two strip heights rotating in different directions. The results of previous smooth walls (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013) and parallel roughness walls (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016) are also shown in figure 3(a) for reference. In the non-vortical laminar flow regime, the flow only has an azimuthal velocity component and ${Nu}_{\omega } = 1$ for a smooth wall by definition. However, the values of ${Nu}_{\omega }$ are larger than 1 for a rough wall, and a higher strip results in a larger ${Nu}_{\omega }$. Although both flows for the smooth and rough cases are purely azimuthal at this regime, the $\omega$-gradient of the latter is larger and the radial velocity ${u}_{r} = 0$. According to (2.5), the angular velocity flux ${J}^{\omega }$ for the rough walls is larger, i.e. the torque is larger. In addition, we also find that the critical Taylor number ($Ta_{c}$), determined based on the onset of Taylor vortices in the TC system, is affected by the rough surface. We conducted a series of simulations with various strip heights ($\delta = 0.1 d$ and $\delta = 0.2{d}$) at different Taylor numbers. The critical Taylor number ($Ta_{c} \approx 1.15 \times 10^{4}$ or $Ta_{c} \approx 1.35 \times 10^{4}$) was identified as the value at which Taylor vortices became evident, while $Ta_{c} \approx 1 \times 10^{4}$ for a smooth wall in previous studies (Grossmann et al. Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016; Xu et al. Reference Xu, Zhao, Sun, He and Wang2022) with the same radius ratio $\eta = 0.714$, which means that the presence of a rough surface influences the value of this critical Taylor number. These results can be easily understood. The appearance of strips enlarges the effective radius of the inner cylinder, which makes the effective radius ratio of the rough wall larger than that of the smooth wall, therefore, the critical Taylor number is larger (Pirro & Quadrio Reference Pirro and Quadrio2008).
After the onset of Taylor vortices, no matter whether walls are smooth or not, the torque ${Nu}_{\omega }$ increases with Ta. It is difficult to directly compare our results with other turbulent flow systems with rough walls, but the study with other types of rough walls in TC can be chosen for comparison. As shown in figure 3(a), despite the types of the roughness being discrepant, a similar conclusion is obtained, that is, higher roughness results in a larger torque. However, compared with the parallel roughness, the drag enhancement of the vertical one is better. In addition to this, the rotating direction of the rough inner cylinder has no effect on the torque at a fixed strip height for low Taylor numbers. This can be seen more clearly in figure 3(b), which presents the deviation of ${Nu}_{\omega }$ from the corresponding smooth one at different strip heights and rotating directions. It is shown that the effect of strip height on the torque becomes more significant with increasing Ta after the onset of Taylor vortices. Additionally, a higher strip results in a larger torque increase with the same Taylor number. In addition, the effects of rotating direction on the torque for different strip heights are different. For the case of $\delta = 0.2{d}$, the influence of rotating direction on torque appears when ${Ta} > 10^{6}$, and compared with the case of ${\omega }_{i} > 0$, the torque of ${\omega }_{i} < 0$ is larger. However, the effect of rotating direction on the torque comes out until ${Ta} \approx 10^{7}$ for $\delta = 0.1{d}$, and the difference between the counter-clockwise and clockwise rotations on the torque of $\delta = 0.1{d}$ is smaller than the corresponding difference of $\delta = 0.2{d}$ at the same Ta.
Here, ${Nu}_{\omega }-1$ is the additional transport of angular velocity on the top of the non-vortical laminar transport in TC flow. Figure 4 shows the numerically calculated ${Nu}_{\omega }-1$ with increasing Ta after the appearance of Taylor vortices. Here, we plot ${Nu}_{\omega } - 1$ versus ${Ta} - Ta_{c}$ rather than versus Ta to better show the scaling at low Ta (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013). For the smooth TC flow, from ${Ta} = 3.9 \times 10^{4}$ up to ${Ta} = 3\times 10^{6}$, an effective scaling law of ${Nu}_{\omega } - 1 \sim ({Ta} - {Ta}_{c})^{1/3}$ is found, which is connected with the laminar Taylor vortices regime. When ${Ta} > 3\times 10^{6}$, there is a transitional region in which the bulk becomes turbulent but the large-scale coherent structure can still be identified when looking at the time-averaged quantities, which is associated with the turbulent Taylor vortices regime (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco, Grossmann and Lohse2014b). In this transitional regime, the boundary layers are laminar first and become gradually turbulent with increasing Ta.
The situation becomes different for the TC flow with rough walls. As shown in figure 4, at the laminar Taylor vortices regime, the effective scaling exponent $\beta \approx 0.35$ for different strip heights on the inner cylinder ($\delta = 0.1{d}$ and $\delta = 0.2{d}$) rotating in clockwise (${\omega }_{i} < 0$) and counter-clockwise (${\omega }_{i} > 0$) directions. However, the situation becomes more complicated at the turbulent regime. The exponent $\beta$ is influenced not only by the height of the strip, but also by the rotating direction of the inner rough wall. Figure 4 shows that the effect of strip height on the exponent does not show any regularity, but the influence of rotating direction of the inner rough wall is regular, i.e. the exponent $\beta$ is slightly larger for the cases of ${\omega }_{i} < 0$ compared to the values of ${\omega }_{i} > 0$ at the same strip height.
In TC flow, the angular velocity flux is calculated as ${J}^{\omega } = {r}^{3} ( \langle {u}_{r} \omega \rangle _{A,t} - \nu \partial _{r} \langle \omega \rangle _{A,t} )$, where the first term is the convective contribution and the second term is the diffusive (or viscous) contribution (Eckhardt et al. Reference Eckhardt, Grossmann and Lohse2007). The radial profiles of these two contributions for different rotating directions of the inner rough wall with $\delta = 0.2{d}$ at ${Ta} = 2.44 \times 10^{5}$ and ${Ta} = 2.39 \times 10^{7}$ are exemplified in figure 5. It can be seen that the convective contribution to the torque is mainly in the central region and disappears at the boundaries, as expected. In contrast, the diffusive contribution dominates near the walls but drops to almost zero in the middle.
Furthermore, as shown in figure 5(a), the rotating directions have no effect on the convective and diffusive contributions to ${J}^{\omega }$ at low Taylor number ${Ta} = 2.44 \times 10^{5}$ which is in the laminar Taylor vortices regime. However, as shown in figure 5(b), the situation becomes different at a large Taylor number ${Ta} = 2.39\times 10^{7}$ that corresponds to the turbulent Taylor vortices regime. It can be seen that the diffusive contribution is still unaffected by the rotating direction of the inner rough wall except for the inner and outer boundaries, but the rotating direction has a significant effect on the convective contribution to the torque. When the inner wall rotates in the clockwise direction ($\omega _{i} < 0$), the convection term is larger than that of the counter-clockwise direction ($\omega _{i} > 0$). The results presented in figure 5 are consistent with those reported in figure 3 and show that the torque enhancement is dominantly due to the increased convective contribution.
To better explain why the rotating direction of the inner rough wall influences the convective term of torque at large Taylor number ${Ta} = 2.39 \times 10^{7}$ in figure 5(b), as shown in figure 6, the convection contributions to the total torque are further decomposed into two components: ${r}^{3} \langle \bar {u} _{r} \bar {\omega }\rangle _{A,t}$ is the averages (which have a structure, due to the presence of Taylor rolls) and ${r}^{3} \langle {u}^{\prime }_{r} \omega ^{\prime } \rangle _{A,t}$ is arising from the correlation of the fluctuations. Figure 6 shows that compared with the turbulent convective flux ${r}^{3} \langle {u}^{\prime }_{r}\omega ^{\prime } \rangle _{A,t}$ caused by the Reynolds stress, the mean convective flux ${r} ^{3} \langle \bar {u} _{r} \bar {\omega }\rangle _{A,t}$ caused by the presence of mean Taylor vortices dominates to derive torques (Brauckmann & Eckhardt Reference Brauckmann and Eckhardt2013). Additionally, when the rough inner wall rotates in different directions, for the average term, the value of clockwise rotation $\omega _{i} < 0$ near the smooth outer wall is greater than the value of counter-clockwise rotation $\omega _{i} > 0$, while the opposite is true on the side near the inner wall, which results in a small effect of the different rotation directions of the inner rough wall on the mean convective flux ${r}^{3} \langle \bar {u}_{r} \bar {\omega }\rangle _{A,t}$ contribution to the total flux ${J}^{\omega }$. However, the situation becomes simple for the fluctuant term, ${r}^{3} \langle {u}^{\prime }_{r} \omega ^{\prime } \rangle _{A,t}$ with $\omega _{i} < 0$ always greater than the value with $\omega _{i} > 0$ at the same radius, indicating that the turbulence caused by clockwise rotation ($\omega _{i} < 0$) is more intense than that of $\omega _{i} > 0$. Those facts lead to the observed torque enhancement and the different effects of rotating directions.
3.2. The mechanism of torque enhancement
To understand the mechanism underlying the torque enhancement and the effect of rotating directions, it is useful to analyse the dependence of the azimuthal velocity profiles ${u}_{\varphi } ({r})$ on the driving parameter Ta. Therefore, ${u}_{\varphi } ({r})$ for two representative Taylor numbers ${Ta} = 2.44 \times 10^{5}$ and ${Ta} = 2.39 \times 10^{7}$ are presented in figure 7. It can be seen that the azimuthal velocity profiles are influenced by the strip height, where a higher strip results in a larger azimuthal velocity at the same radius. For small Taylor number ${Ta} = 2.44 \times 10^{5}$, the azimuthal velocity profiles are almost unaffected by the rotating direction of the inner rough wall. At large Taylor number ${Ta} = 2.39\times 10^{7}$, the rotating direction has an effect on the azimuthal velocity profiles, that is, the clockwise rotation $\omega _{i} < 0$ of the vertical asymmetric rough wall makes the azimuthal velocity larger at a given r, compared with the case of counter-clockwise rotation $\omega _{i} > 0$. This is because the shear rate of the azimuthal velocity at the rough wall is smaller than that in the corresponding smooth case (Van den Berg et al. Reference Van den Berg, Doering, Lohse and Lathrop2003; Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017), and the azimuthal velocity should be biased towards the rough wall at the mid gap compared with the smooth case, leading to the stronger coupling between the rough wall and the bulk. Furthermore, the difference in azimuthal velocity profiles with a higher strip height between counter-clockwise and clockwise rotation is larger. These observations explain the torque enhancement and the effects of rotating direction to a certain extent.
It is well known that the characteristics of velocity boundary layer (BL) reflect many features of wall turbulence (Grossmann et al. Reference Grossmann, Lohse and Sun2016). Therefore, the non-dimensionalized azimuthal velocity profiles ${u}^+$ versus the wall distance ${y}^+$ for the outer smooth wall and the inner rough wall in the case of ${Ta} = 2.39 \times 10^{7}$ are shown in figure 8. Figure 8(a) shows that there is a viscous sublayer (${u}^+ = {y}^+$), which is well known for a smooth wall. The BL of the outer wall is influenced by the height of the strip attached to the inner wall, resulting in upward shifts of the log-law region, that is, a higher strip results in a larger shift. However, the rotating direction of inner rough wall with the same strip height has no effect on the characteristics of velocity boundary layer near the outer stationary wall. For the inner cylinder, it can be seen from figure 8(b) that the BL is not only influenced by the strip height, but also affected by the rotating direction of the inner wall. Compared with the smooth inner wall, significant downward shifts are acquired for the rough cases, which are similar to the results of Zhu et al. (Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016). Meanwhile, the downward trend is larger for the higher strip or for clockwise rotation ($\omega _{i} < 0$) of the inner rough wall with the same strip height. It means that a higher strip and clockwise rotation ($\omega _{i} < 0$) of the inner rough wall can form a thinner BL at this Ta. As a result, the torque enhancement becomes more obvious with the higher strip and clockwise rotation of the inner rough wall at large Ta.
We also plot the dimensionless value $\delta / \delta _{v}$ of the roughness height in wall units for different strip heights in figure 9, where the grey and blue dashed lines denote the boundaries of the viscous sublayer ($\delta / \delta _{v} < 5$) and buffer layer ($5 < \delta / \delta _{v} < 30$) (Pope Reference Pope2000). Figure 9 shows that if these dimensionless values are in the viscous sublayer, the flow is dominated by viscous effects and the rotation direction of the asymmetric rough wall has no change at all on the torque Nusselt number (which can be seen in figure 3b), which is similar to the common finding that the rough surface becomes active only when the thermal boundary layer thickness is smaller than the characteristic height of roughness (Shen, Tong & Xia Reference Shen, Tong and Xia1996; Stringano, Pascazio & Verzicco Reference Stringano, Pascazio and Verzicco2006) in Rayleigh–Bénard (RB) flow. In TC flow with parallel grooves, the same results reported by Zhu et al. (Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016) showed that the effect of grooves on the torque $Nu_{\omega }$ can only be seen when the BL thickness becomes thinner than the groove height. However, the pressure drag is affected by the rotation direction of the asymmetric roughness in the buffer layers when $\delta / \delta _{v} \approx 16$ for $\delta = 0.1{d}$ at ${Ta} = 9.52 \times 10^{6}$ and $\delta / \delta _{v} \approx 16$ for $\delta = 0.2{d}$ at ${Ta} = 1.91 \times 10^{6}$ in the present simulations (as shown in figure 10b). Furthermore, it is worth noting that a two-dimensional triangle with the top facing forward (into the wind) has a lower drag as compared with the same triangle with the top pointing in the downstream direction at sufficiently large Reynolds numbers (e.g. drag coefficient 1.6 versus 2.0 according to White, Fluid Mechanics, 2011, table 7.2). Our results are consistent with White (Reference White2011), albeit the Reynolds number is relatively lower and the triangles are attached to the wall.
In the present study, the TC system is driven by the rotation of the inner cylinder. To reveal the mechanism of torque enhancement more directly, it is necessary to study the torque at the inner wall. To find the mechanism behind the increase of ${Nu}_{\omega }$ for the vertical strips on the inner wall, the pressure and viscous contributions at the rough wall are quantified. The part of the pressure force is defined as (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017)
where p is the pressure, r is the radius, and $\tau _{pa}$ is the torque required to drive the system in the purely azimuthal and laminar flow. While the part of viscous force is defined as (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017)
where $\tau_{\nu }$ is the viscous shear stress.
Figure 10(a) shows the contributions to the total torque originating from ${Nu_{p}}$ and ${Nu_{\nu }}$ for an asymmetric vertical rough wall rotating in different directions with two strip heights $\delta = 0.1{d}$ and $\delta = 0.2{d}$, and the log-log scale is also shown in figure 10(b) at laminar and turbulent vortex regimes. As shown in figure 10(a), at small Taylor numbers, the torque on the rough wall almost all comes from the viscous force. With increasing Ta, the contributions of viscous and pressure forces to the torque both increase, but the latter is significantly faster than the former. More importantly, ${Nu_{\nu }}$ is independent of the rotating directions at a same strip height although the strip is asymmetric. Furthermore, the higher the strip, the larger the viscous force to the total torque at the same Ta. By contrast, ${Nu_{p}}$ in the clockwise rotation cases are larger than those for counter-clockwise rotation at the same strip height, which has not been seen in the previous study with symmetric rough walls (Zhu et al. Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017). Those facts explain the results shown in figure 3, that is, the torques of clockwise rotation become larger than those of counter-clockwise rotation for the same Ta and indicate that the torque difference of different rotating directions is dominantly due to the different contribution of ${Nu_{p}}$.
Furthermore, we also plot the log-log scale in figure 10(b) from ${Ta} = 3.9\times 10^{7}$ to ${Ta} = 2.39\times 10^{7}$. This reveals that both the contribution of viscous forces to torque and the overall torque display segmented power-law relationships with respect to Ta. In both scenarios, distinct power-law exponents emerge in the laminar and turbulent Taylor vortex regimes. Within the laminar regime, the power-law exponent is greater, signifying a more pronounced dependency of torque contribution on Ta. Conversely, in the turbulent regime, the power-law exponent is smaller, indicating a comparatively weaker dependency. However, unlike the segmented power-law relationship between viscous forces and Ta, the contribution of pressure to torque does not exhibit a segmented power-law relationship with Ta. Instead, it is characterized by a smaller prefactor yet a larger power-law exponent. This suggests that pressure plays a more substantial role in torque generation, showing a stronger dependence on Ta. This implication aligns with the dominance of pressure at high Taylor numbers, as reported by Zhu et al. (Reference Zhu, Verzicco and Lohse2017). In summary, these observations indicate the intricate relationships between viscous stress and pressure in different Ta number regimes.
4. Conclusions
In the present study, extensive direct numerical simulations were conducted to explore the effect of inner rough walls on the transport properties of Taylor–Couette flow. The inner cylinder was roughened by attaching 18 vertical asymmetric strips, with strip heights of $\delta = 0.1{d}$ and $\delta = 0.2{d}$. Numerical results were obtained for Ta ranging from $1.87 \times 10^{3}$ to $2.39\times 10^{7}$ at a radius ratio of $\eta = 0.714$ and an aspect ratio of $\varGamma = 2/3{\rm \pi}$, using periodic boundary conditions in the azimuthal and axial directions.
The main conclusions that can be drawn include: (i) the rotation direction of the vertical asymmetric rough wall has a negligible effect on the torque at low Taylor numbers. The influence gradually becomes more pronounced with increasing Ta, and the drag enhancement effect of clockwise rotation of the inner cylinder is more significant than that of counter-clockwise rotation; (ii) the rotation direction of a vertical asymmetric rough wall also has a negligible effect on the azimuthal velocity and the Reynolds stress at low Taylor number, they are however larger at high Ta when the inner cylinder rotating in clockwise direction; (iii) for large Ta, the velocity boundary layer (BL) in the case of clockwise rotation is thinner than that in the case of counter-clockwise rotation, due to the observed stronger turbulence; (iv) the torque on the vertical asymmetric rough wall is derived from the viscous force and the pressure force. The contribution of the viscous force to the torque with the same strip height is always equal at the same Ta, irrespective of the rotating direction of the inner vertical asymmetric wall. However, the contribution of the pressure force to the torque for the same strip height is unaffected by the rotating direction of the inner wall at low Taylor numbers but is significantly affected at large Ta. Moreover, the contribution of the pressure force in the case of clockwise rotation is larger than that in the case of counter-clockwise rotation, resulting in the observed larger torque in clockwise rotation.
Funding
This study is financially supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (11988102, 21978295) and the New Cornerstone Science Foundation through the XPLORER prize.
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Appendix A. Resolution tests and numerical details
To obtain reliable numerical results, the grid's spatial resolutions have to be sufficient. The requirements for spatial resolution is to have the grid length in each direction of the order of local Kolmogorov length. In the present simulations, the hexahedral grid was uniform in the azimuthal and axial directions, and refined near the inner and outer cylindrical walls in the radial direction (Dong Reference Dong2007; Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013). In TC flow, ${J}^{\omega }$ and ${Nu}_{\omega } = {J}^{\omega } /{J}^{\omega }_{lam}$ should not be a function of the radius as mentioned previously, but numerically it does show some dependence. Because of numerical error, ${J}^{\omega }$ will deviate slightly along the r from a fixed value. To quantify this difference, Zhu et al. (Reference Zhu, Ostilla-Mónico, Verzicco and Lohse2016) defined
where the maximum and minimum values are determined over all r, which is selected to be within the scope of $r_{i}+\delta \leq {r} \leq r_{o}$. It is a very strict requirement for the meshes that $\varDelta _{J} \leq 0.01$ (Ostilla-Mónico et al. Reference Ostilla-Mónico, Stevens, Grossmann, Verzicco and Lohse2013). We make sure all the simulations meet this criterion, the details are listed in table 1.
A resolution test of grid length has been exemplified in figure 11, which presents four graphs of radial dependence of ${Nu}_{\omega }$ for different strip heights and different rotating directions of the inner rough wall at ${Ta} = 2.44 \times 10 ^{5}$ with three different grid resolutions. An error bar indicating a 1 % error is provided for reference. It is shown that for the under-resolved cases ($N_{\varphi } \times N_{r} \times N_{z} = 80\times 80\times 40$), the error of the ${Nu}_{\omega }$ along the radius is larger than 1 %. However, the ${Nu}_{\omega }$ error is less than 1 % for the reasonably resolved cases ($N_{\varphi }\times N_{r}\times N_{z} = 140 \times 140 \times 70$) and the extremely well-resolved cases ($N_{\varphi } \times N_{r}\times N_{z} = 200 \times 200 \times 100$).