6 April 2010 to 28 May 2010
Nordita
Europe/Stockholm timezone

    Conference 26-28 May (Weeks 5-8)

    Official schedule of talks

    Preliminary schedule (Weeks 5-8)

  • Photos of participants in Week 8
  • Photos of participants in Week 7
  • Photos of participants in Week 6
  • Photos of participants in Week 5

    Dinner on 27 May

    The application deadline has now passed, so no new applications can be considered. We can only accept applications/registrations from those who have been in touch with the organizers.

    This program has two related focus areas, each of which culminate in a 2-day conference:

  • 6 April-2 May: Turbulent boundary layers at high Reynolds number, coordinators: Axel Brandenburg Nordita), Dan Henningson (KTH), Henrik Alfredsson (KTH)
    6-9 April: Spring School on Turbulent Boundary Layers
    29-30 April: Conference on Turbulent Boundary Layers

  • 3-29 May: Turbulent combustion, coordinators: Axel Brandenburg (Nordita), Nils Erland Haugen (Sintef), Arne Johansson (KTH)
    26-28 May: Conference on Turbulent Combustion

    One of the big challenges to mankind in our time is the uncontrolled release of greenhouse gases from conventional power plants into the atmosphere. Capturing the resulting carbon dioxide from the exhaust gas is in principle possible but expensive due to the low partiall pressure of carbon dioxide in the exhaust gas from conventional power plants. One of the preferred alternative techniques involves the burning of hydrogen that can be extracted from hydrocarbons. In that case the carbon dioxide is taken out beforehand and can be stored, for example deep underground in existing oil reservoirs. Numerical simulations play here an important role in determining the optimum combustion chamber design, which has an impact on the lifetime of the combustion chamber itself and on reduction of the unwanted production of various nitrogen oxides.
    Turbulent boundary layers, appearing on solid surfaces of bodies submerged in fluids but also in channel and pipe flows, are among the canonical, wall-bounded, turbulent flows that have been the focus of experimental and analytical investigations for almost a century. Still there are several unresolved issues even related to fairly basic mechanisms, such as the variation of turbulent stresses with Reynolds number, scaling of spectra, what are the differences (if any) between confined flows (channel and pipe) and open boundary layer flows, the interaction between outer and inner region, the properties of small-scale turbulence near the dissipation range etc. Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS) have made it possible recently to penetrate the details of such flows in great detail, and gives the researcher access to all types of information, such as stresses, vorticity, pressure fluctuations, complete Reynolds-stress budgets, as well as correlations among these quantities. In order to clearly show scaling behaviour it is necessary to achieve sufficient scale separation between outer and inner scales which is still only marginally possible even in the largest DNS carried out today. In addition, proper spatial resolution is crucial for accurate and reliable DNS data. On the other hand, simulation approaches at least partially relying on modelling such as large-eddy simulation (LES) are also topics of intense ongoing research right now. Experiments in turbulent boundary layers experience the opposite problem as simulations in the sense that the Reynolds can easily be made large, however the measurements can usually only provide limited information; some quantities are difficult or even impossible to measure. Therefore the interaction between groups and the exchange of experimental and DNS data is extremely useful in order to resolve many of the open issues mentioned above.

    In the first part of the Nordita programme, devoted to turbulent boundary layers, some of the leading fluid physicists who have been working actively in the area of turbulent boundary layers will meet to penetrate some of the unanswered scientific questions regarding wall-bounded flows. To their disposal are several different DNS data sets obtained by various groups, and experimental data will be available for analysis and comparison during the programme. Regular seminars and two larger general-interest lectures are held during the programme, together with a four days graduate school at the beginning (April 6-9, 2010) and a workshop at the end (April 29-30, 2010).

    If you want further information of the turbulent boundary layer part of the program please contact Philipp Schlatter (pschlatt@mech.kth.se) or Henrik Alfredsson (hal@mech.kth.se).
    The aim of the program is twofold; firstly to bring together people from the community of direct turbulence simulations to probe the validity of turbulence models, Large Eddy Simulations, and Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes solvers that are commonly used in industry. Secondly the aim is to resolve some of the still unresolved problems within turbulent combustion, such as e.g. how a turbulent premixed flame propagates. The importance of basic research in connection with energy production is evident. Simulations are important, because questions regarding the temperature distribution cannot easily be addressed experimentally. Simulations provide an important tool, if we can trust the subgrid scale prescriptions employed in many simulations.

    The picture at the top is courtesy of Miyauchi Toshio and Tanahashi Mamoru: (link to figure source).
    The second picture is courtesy of Philipp Schlatter (link to figure source).


    The meeting is sponsored jointly by Nordita and the Linné FLOW Centre in Stockholm.

    Logistic issues

    Nordita has reserved about 25 apartments for program participants. This is the preferred mode of accommodation, especially for our long-term participants.

    How to get here? (this link has a description and a map). The meeting takes place in the main AlbaNova building, just next to the Nordita building.

Starts
Ends
Europe/Stockholm
Nordita
During the program a number of scientists will come and go, but many of them stay for at least 3 weeks. At any given time there will be about 15-25 scientists from the Program working at Nordita. They have a desk and share office space with other Program participants.
In addition to informal discussions over coffee, we have typically 2-3 formal discussion sessions and 1-2 regular talks each week. A discussion session would be on a particular (often controversial) topic and 2-3 people would briefly explain their opinion and results on that, and then there will be a detailed discussion. We feel it is important not to occupy each day with activity, so there should be time for everybody to do their regular work, which might of course be work that is inspired by the formal or informal discussions and talks. There will also be a 2-3 day conference with 30 min talks, which gives everybody an opportunity to speak, so there is no need to "waste" time with too many talks during the actual program.
Nordita has rented a number of one-room apartments for program participants. Two-room apartments may also be available for participants coming together with their family. There is also an English School just next to Nordita, which may be of interest to some participants. For participants staying at least 3 weeks Nordita will cover both travel expenses and accommodation, in addition to approximately 30 euros per day for daily expenses.