Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7051075 European Journal of Mechanics - B/Fluids 2018 17 Pages PDF
Abstract
The paper is devoted to experimental investigation of an efficient mechanism of distributed excitation of nonstationary Görtler vortices in a boundary layer on concave wall due to scattering of three-dimensional, streamwise oriented freestream vortices on natural two-dimensional base-flow nonuniformity associated with the boundary layer growth. The investigations are performed in a broad range of disturbance frequencies and spanwise wavenumbers. The measurements have shown that the distributed receptivity mechanism is able to modify significantly the disturbance growth rates. This mechanism is found to be able to compete successfully with the linear instability mechanism. It is found that at relatively low frequencies and not too large freestream disturbance amplitudes, the Görtler modes' development is dominated basically by the corresponding linear instability mechanism. Meanwhile, this mechanism becomes weaker with growth of frequency and, simultaneously, the distributed receptivity mechanism gets stronger. This leads to enhancement of role of the latter in amplification of Görtler instability modes, and at high frequencies the role of the distributed receptivity mechanism becomes very important and often even decisive one. Based on deep processing of the experimental data, quantitative values of the distributed linear receptivity coefficients are obtained for the case of excitation of unsteady Görtler modes and estimated for the case of steady Görtler vortices by means of extrapolation to the zero frequency. A complementary experiment devoted to investigation of the problem of linear unsteady Görtler instability is performed for the particular conditions of the distributed receptivity experiments. All main stability characteristics are obtained and compared with calculated ones. In general, the experimental information presented in this paper can be used for verification of various instability and vortex receptivitytheories.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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