Favre averaging is the density-weighted averaging method, used in variable density or compressible turbulent flows, in place of the Reynolds averaging. The method was introduced formally by the French scientist A. J. Favre in 1965,[1] [2] although Osborne Reynolds has also already introduced the density-weighted averaging in 1895.[3] The averaging results a simplistic form for the nonlinear convective terms of the Navier-Stokes equations, at the expense of making the diffusion terms complicated.
Favre averaging is carried out for all dynamical variables except the pressure. For the velocity components,
ui
\widetilde{ui}=
\overline{\rhoui | |
where the overbar indicates the typical Reynolds averaging, the tilde denotes the Favre averaging and
\rho(x,t)
ui=\widetilde{ui}+ui''
where
ui''
\widetilde{ui''}=0
\overline{\rhoui''}=0
ui=\overline{ui}+ui'
ui'
\overline{ui'}=0
\widetilde{ui}=\overline{ui}\left(1+
\overline{\rho'ui' | |
The advantage of Favre-averaged variables are clearly seen by taking the normal averaging of the term
\rhouiuj
\begin{align} \overline{\rhouiuj}&=\overline{\rho}\overline{ui}\overline{uj}+\overline\rho\overline{ui'uj'}+\overline{ui}\overline{\rho'uj'}+\overline{uj}\overline{\rho'ui'}+\overline{\rho'ui'uj'}\\ &=\overline\rho\widetilde{ui}\widetilde{uj}+\overline{\rhoui''uj''}. \end{align}
As we can see, there are five terms in the averaging when expressed in terms of Reynolds-averaged variables, whereas we have only two terms when it is expressed in terms of Favre-averaged variables.