کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
655412 | 1457649 | 2011 | 13 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Self-sustained oscillations in a cavity arise due to the unsteady separation of boundary layers at the leading edge. The dynamic mode decomposition method was employed to analyze the self-sustained oscillations. Two cavity flow data sets, with or without self-sustained oscillations and possessing thin or thick incoming boundary layers (ReD = 12,000 and 3000), were analyzed. The ratios between the cavity depth and the momentum thickness (D/θ) were 40 and 4.5, respectively, and the cavity aspect ratio was L/D = 2. The dynamic modes extracted from the thick boundary layer indicated that the upcoming boundary layer structures and the shear layer structures along the cavity lip line coexisted with coincident frequency space but with different wavenumber space, whereas structures with a thin boundary layer showed complete coherence among the modes to produce self-sustained oscillations. This result suggests that the hydrodynamic resonances that gave rise to the self-sustained oscillations occurred if the upcoming boundary layer structures and the shear layer structures coincided, not only in frequencies, but also in wavenumbers. The influences of the cavity dimensions and incoming momentum thickness on the self-sustained oscillations were examined.
► DMD modes were extracted from two cavity flow data set at ReD = 12,000 and 3000.
► At ReD = 3000, frequencies of boundary layer and shear layer structures coincides.
► Boundary layer structures exceed in size with shear layer structures.
► At ReD = 12,000, structure showed coherence leading to self-sustained oscillations.
► Hydrodynamic resonance occurs if coherence exists in wavenumber and frequency.
Journal: International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow - Volume 32, Issue 6, December 2011, Pages 1098–1110