The turbulent flow in a slug: a re-examination

2020 
The transition to turbulence in pipe flow proceeds through several distinct stages, eventually producing aggressively expanding regions of fluctuations, ‘slugs’, surrounded by laminar flow. By examining mean-velocity profiles, fluctuating-velocity profiles and Reynolds stress profiles, the seminal study of Wygnanski & Champagne ( J. Fluid Mech. , vol. 59 (2), 1973, 281–335) concluded that the flow inside slugs is ‘identical’ to fully turbulent flow. Although this conclusion is widely accepted, upon closer examination of their analysis, we find that their data cannot be used to substantiate this conclusion. We resolve this conflict via new experiments and simulations wherein we pair slugs and fully turbulent flow at the same value of Reynolds number ( $Re$ ). We conclude that the flow inside a slug is indeed indistinguishable from a fully turbulent flow but only when the two flows share the same value of $Re$ . Our work highlights the rich $Re$ -dependence of transitional pipe flows.
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