Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
652190 Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Much is known about smooth-flat-plate turbulent boundary layers (TBLs) at laboratory-scale Reynolds numbers because of a wealth of experimental data. However, smooth-flat-plate TBL data are much less common at the high Reynolds numbers typical of aerodynamic and hydrodynamic applications (Rex ∼ 108–1010), and at the even higher Reynolds numbers of many geophysical flows. This paper presents new LDV-measured profiles of the stream-wise velocity variance, the wall-normal velocity variance, and the Reynolds shear stress from the TBL that formed on a smooth flat plate at Karman numbers from 15,000 to 60,000 (Rex from 75 million to 220 million). The experiments were conducted in the William B. Morgan Large Cavitation Channel on a polished (k+ < 0.2) flat-plate test model 12.9 m long and 3.05 m wide at water flow speeds up to 20 m s−1. The TBL on the model developed in a mild favorable pressure gradient having an acceleration parameter K ∼ 10−10. When plotted with the usual inner and outer scalings, the stream-wise velocity variance profiles display a Reynolds number dependence that is consistent with prior lower Reynolds-number zero-pressure-gradient TBL measurements. However, using the same normalizations, the profiles of wall-normal velocity variance and Reynolds shear stress are found to be Reynolds number independent, or nearly so, when experimental uncertainties are considered.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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