Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9708751 Journal of Fluids and Structures 2005 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
An innovative method is presented for control of an oscillatory turbulent jet in a thin rectangular cavity with a thickness to width ratio of 0.16. Jet flow control is achieved by mass injection of a secondary jet into the region above the submerged primary jet nozzle exit and perpendicular to the primary nozzle axis. An experimental model, a 2-D and a 3-D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model are used to investigate the flow characteristics under various secondary injection mass flow rates and injection positions. Two-dimensional laser Doppler anemometry (LDA) measurements are compared with results from the CFD models, which incorporate a standard k-ε turbulence model or a 2-D and 3-D realisable k-ε model. Experimental results show deflection angles up to 23.3° for 24.6% of relative secondary mass flow are possible. The key to high jet control sensitivity is found to be lateral jet momentum with the optimum injection position at 12% of cavity width (31.6% of the primary nozzle length) above the primary nozzle exit. CFD results also show that a standard k-ε turbulence closure with nonequilibrium wall functions provides the best predictions of the flow.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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