Further Weakly-Nonlinear Approaches to Laminar-Flow Stability: Blasius Boundary-Layer Flow as a Paradigm

Author(s):  
Akiva M. Yaglom ◽  
Uriel Frisch
Author(s):  
Ali Belhocine ◽  
Nadica Stojanovic ◽  
Oday Ibraheem Abdullah

In this paper, steady laminar boundary layer flow of a Newtonian fluid over a flat plate in a uniform free stream was investigated numerically when the surface plate is heated by forced convection from the hot fluid. This flow is a good model of many situations involving flow over fins that are relatively widely spaced. All the solutions given here were with constant fluid properties and negligible viscous dissipation for two-dimensional, steady, incompressible laminar flow with zero pressure gradient. The similarity solution has shown its efficiency here to transform the governing equations of the thermal boundary layer into a nonlinear, third-order ordinary differential equation and solved numerically by using 4th-order Runge-Kutta method which in turn was programmed in FORTRAN language. The dimensionless temperature, velocity, and all boundary layer functions profiles were obtained and plotted in figures for different parameters entering into the problem. Several results of best approximations and expressions of important correlations relating to heat transfer rates were drawn in this study of which Prandtl’s number to the plate for physical interest was also discussed across the tables. The same case of solution procedure was made for a plane plate subjected to other thermal boundary conditions in a laminar flow. Finally, for the validation of the treated numerical model, the results obtained are in good agreement with those of the specialized literature, and comparison with available results in certain cases is excellent.


1982 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 377-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. B. Ingham ◽  
L. T. Hildyard

The Blasius boundary layer on a flat plate in the presence of a constant ambient magnetic field is examined. A numerical integration of the MHD boundary layer equations from the leading edge is presented showing how the asymptotic solution described by Sears is approached.


Author(s):  
Christian Helcig ◽  
Christian Teigeler ◽  
Stefan aus der Wiesche

Since nearly one century, the flow on a flat rotating disk has provided the paradigm for studying rotating flows. For the laminar flow regime, a self-similar solution was obtained by von Kármán [6] in 1921, and a rather special feature of his exact solution of the Navier-Stokes equation is a constant boundary layer thickness not depending on the radial coordinate. A substantial modification of this canonical configuration is given by a wavy disk with a sinusoidal surface shape. Although axis-symmetric, no exact solution for the laminar flow on a wavy disk is known so far. In this study, detailed measurements of the velocity profiles were performed within the laminar boundary layer flow on a wavy disk. Based upon the experimental data, the potential of a self-similar solution approach for describing the resulting flow field was assessed. It was found that such an approach is useful for approximating the far-field solution but systematic deviations were observed in the vicinity of the disk origin.


Author(s):  
Konstantinos Tsigklifis ◽  
Anthony D. Lucey

We develop a model to study the fluid-structure interaction (FSI) of a compliant panel with a Blasius boundary-layer flow. We carry out a two-dimensional global linear stability analysis modeling the flow using a combination of vortex and source boundary-element sheets on a computational grid while the dynamics of a plate-spring compliant wall are represented in finite-difference form. The system is then couched as an eigenvalue problem and the eigenvalues of the various flow- and wall-based instabilities are analyzed for two distinct sets of system parameters. Key findings are that coalescence — or resonance — of a structural eigenmode with either the most unstable flow-based Tollmien-Schlichting Wave (TSW) or wall-based travelling-wave flutter (TWF) modes can occur. This renders the convective nature of these instabilities to become global for a finite compliant wall, a phenomenon that has not hitherto been reported in the literature.


1995 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 1282-1291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uwe Ehrenstein ◽  
Werner Koch

1964 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 469-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Cess

An analysis has been made to determine the effect of thermal radiation upon heat transfer to boundary-layer flow of an absorbing gas. Laminar flow across an isothermal flat plate is considered, and first-order interaction effects between the convection and radiation processes are evaluated for a gas with Pr = 1.0. The plate surface is assumed to be gray, and two types of gases are considered: a gray gas and a nongray gas for which the monochromatic absorption coefficient is assumed to be independent of temperature. The first-order results for the simplified version of a nongray gas differ substantially from those for the gray gas.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Crepeau ◽  
Hugh M. McIlroy

Abstract This paper gives results of an experimental study to determine the effect that a surface reaction has on a boundary layer flow. An innovative technique has been developed to visualize the effect a surface reaction has on a flat plate boundary layer flow. A mixture of mineral oil and hexanoic acid flowed at low Reynolds number over a metal plate embedded with a small piece of sodium. The reaction between the hexanoic acid and the sodium metal produced hydrogen bubbles, which rose to the surface. Upstream of the reaction, dye was injected into the laminar flow, and the interaction between the bubbles and the dye was recorded. Results show that bubble entrainment stretch and bend the dye filaments, convect fluid away from the reaction, and create vortices downstream and to the sides of the reaction. These results show that a surface reaction can introduce velocity fluctuations into an otherwise laminar flow. Farther downstream the flow relaminarizes.


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