Effect of free-stream turbulence on vortex shedding in the wakes of cylinders in cross-flow

1974 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.M. Petrie
1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
X.J. Xia ◽  
P.W. Bearman

SummaryThe effect of base slant on the base pressure distribution, drag coefficient and vortex shedding characteristics of a model consisting of an axisymmetric main body with an ellipsoidal nose have been investigated for three fineness ratios; 3, 6 and 9. A sudden change in the drag coefficient and separated flow pattern is observed at a critical slant angle (for constant incidence) or at a critical angle of incidence (for a constant base slant angle). The tests confirm that the value of the maximum drag coefficient is extremely sensitive to angle of incidence. Measurements of the frequency of vortex shedding are presented and the structure of the wake is investigated using smoke visualization and hot-wire correlation measurements. The wake is found to be far less stable than that from a two-dimensional bluff body and the vortex structures are sometimes in-phase and sometimes out of phase across the wake. The effect of free-stream turbulence on this family of body shapes is observed to be different to that on three-dimensional blunt-faced bluff bodies. Free-stream turbulence is found to have a minimal effect on base pressure for slant angles giving a recirculating type near wake flow. When longitudinal vortices are present the addition of free-stream turbulence slightly reduces the magnitude of the peak suctions recorded on the base but has little effect on base drag.


Author(s):  
K. Dullenkopf ◽  
R. E. Mayle

The effect of free-stream turbulence and moving wakes on augmenting heat transfer in accelerating laminar boundary layers is considered. First, the the effect of free-stream turbulence is re-examined in terms of a Nusselt number and turbulence parameter which correctly account for the free-stream acceleration and a correlation for both cylinders in cross flow and airfoils with regions of constant acceleration is obtained. This correlation is then used in a simple quasi-steady model to predict the effect of periodically passing wakes on airfoil laminar heat transfer. A comparison of the predictions with measurements shows good agreement.


Author(s):  
Andrew P. S. Wheeler ◽  
Richard D. Sandberg

In this paper we use direct numerical simulation to investigate the unsteady flow over a model turbine blade-tip at engine scale Reynolds and Mach numbers. The DNS is performed with a new in-house multi-block structured compressible Navier-Stokes solver purposely developed for exploiting high-performance computing systems. The particular case of a transonic tip flow is studied since previous work has suggested compressibility has an important influence on the turbulent nature of the separation bubble at the inlet to the gap and subsequent flow reattachment. The effects of free-stream turbulence, cross-flow and pressure-side boundary-layer on the tip flow aerodynamics and heat transfer are investigated. For ‘clean’ in-flow cases we find that even at engine scale Reynolds numbers the tip flow is intermittent in nature (neither laminar nor fully turbulent). The breakdown to turbulence occurs through the development of spanwise modes with wavelengths around 25% of the gap height. Cross-flows of 25% of the streamwise gap exit velocity are found to increase the stability of the tip flow, and to significantly reduce the turbulence production in the separation bubble. This is predicted through in-house linear stability analysis, and confirmed by the DNS. For the case when the inlet flow has free-stream turbulence, viscous dissipation and the rapid acceleration of the flow at the inlet to the tip-gap causes significant distortion of the vorticity field and reductions of turbulence intensity as the flow enters the tip gap. This means that only very high turbulence levels at the inlet to the computational domain significantly affect the tip heat transfer. The DNS results are compared with RANS predictions using the Spalart-Allmaras and k–ω SST turbulence models. The RANS and DNS predictions give similar qualitative features for the tip flow, but the size and shape of the inlet separation bubble and shock positions differ noticeably. The RANS predictions are particularly insensitive to free-stream turbulence.


Author(s):  
Ting Wang ◽  
Matthew C. Rice

The surface roughness over a serviced turbine airfoil is usually multi-scaled with varying features that are difficult to be universally characterized. However, it was previously discovered in low freestream turbulence conditions that the height of larger roughness produces separation and vortex shedding, which trigger early transition and exert a dominant effect on flow pattern and heat transfer. The geometry of the roughness and smaller roughness scales played secondary roles. This paper extends the previous study to elevated turbulence conditions with free-stream turbulence intensity ranging from 0.2–6.0 percent. A simplified test condition on a flat plate is conducted with two discrete regions having different surface roughness. The leading edge roughness is comprised of a sandpaper strip or a single cylinder. The downstream surface is either smooth or covered with sandpaper of grit sizes ranging from 100 ∼ 40 (Ra = 37 ∼ 119 μm). Hot wire measurements are conducted in the boundary layer to study the flow structure. The results of this study verify that the height of the largest-scale roughness triggers an earlier transition even under elevated turbulence conditions and exerts a more dominant effect on flow and heat transfer than does the geometry of the roughness. Heat transfer enhancements of about 30 ∼ 40 percent over the entire test surface are observed. The vortical motion, generated by the backward facing step at the joint of two roughness regions, is believed to significantly increase momentum transport across the boundary layer and bring the elevated turbulence from the freestream towards the wall. No such long-lasting heat transfer phenomenon is observed in low FSTI cases even though vortex shedding also exists in the low turbulence cases. The heat transfer enhancement decreases, instead of increases, as the downstream roughness height increases.


Author(s):  
Matthew Anderson ◽  
Dylan Shiltz ◽  
Christopher Damm

A fluids laboratory experience that introduces students to dimensional analysis and similitude was designed and performed in a junior-level first course in fluid mechanics. After students are given an introduction to dimensional analysis, the technique is applied to the phenomenon of vortex shedding from a cylinder in cross-flow. With help from the instructor, lab groups use dimensional analysis to ascertain the relevant dimensionless pi terms associated with the phenomenon. After successfully determining that the pi terms are the Strouhal number and the Reynolds number, experiments are performed to elucidate the general functional relationship between the dimensionless groups. To conduct the experiments, a wind-tunnel apparatus is used in conjunction with a Pitot tube for measurements of free stream velocity and a platinum-plated tungsten hot-wire anemometer for rapid (up to 400 kHz) measurements of velocity fluctuations downstream of the cylinder. Utilizing an oscilloscope in parallel with a high-speed data acquisition system, students are able to determine the vortex shedding frequency by performing a spectral analysis (via Fourier transform) of the downstream velocity measurements at multiple free stream velocities and for multiple cylinder diameters (thus a varying Reynolds number). The students’ experimental results were found to agree with relationships found in the technical literature, showing a constant Strouhal number of approximately 0.2 over a wide range of Reynolds numbers. This exercise not only gives students valuable experience in dimensional analysis and design of experiments, it also provides exposure to modern data acquisition and analysis methods.


1988 ◽  
Vol 110 (2) ◽  
pp. 140-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Sakamoto ◽  
H. Haniu

The effect of the addition of the turbulence intensity to the free stream on the characteristics of the bistable flow which takes place around two square prisms in tandem arrangement was studied experimentally at a Reynolds number of 3.32 × 104. A method of obtaining the fluid forces acting on two prisms in the bistable flow regimes where two flow patterns appear intermittently was introduced, and then the characteristics of the fluid forces, the Strouhal number, and the switching frequency of the switch phenomenon with the variation of the freestream turbulence intensity were investigated. Furthermore, the behavior of the fluid forces and the vortex shedding for other spacings between the two prisms were presented for the variation of the turbulence intensity.


2013 ◽  
Vol 735 ◽  
pp. 347-380 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Downs ◽  
Edward B. White

AbstractThe cross-flow instability that arises in swept-wing boundary layers has resisted attempts to describe the path from disturbance initiation to transition. Following concerted research efforts, surface roughness and free-stream turbulence have been identified as the leading providers of initial disturbances for cross-flow instability growth. Although a significant body of work examines the role of free-stream turbulence in the cross-flow problem, the data more relevant to the flight environment (turbulence intensities less than 0.07 %) are sparse. A series of recent experiments indicates that variations within this range may affect the initiation or growth of cross-flow instability amplitudes, hindering comparison among results obtained in different disturbance environments. To address this problem, a series of wind tunnel experiments is performed in which the free-stream turbulence intensity is varied between 0.02 % and 0.2 % of free-stream velocity,${U}_{\infty } $. Measurements of the stationary and travelling mode amplitudes are made in the boundary layer of a 1.83 m chord,$45{{}^\circ} $swept-wing model. These results are compared to those of similar experiments at higher turbulence levels to broaden the current knowledge of this portion of the cross-flow problem. It is observed that both free-stream turbulence and surface roughness contribute to the initiation of unsteady disturbances, and that free-stream turbulence affects the development of both stationary and unsteady cross-flow disturbances. For the range tested, enhanced free-stream turbulence advances the transition location except when a subcritically spaced roughness array is employed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 486 (6) ◽  
pp. 668-672
Author(s):  
S. A. Baranov ◽  
A. Ph. Kiselev ◽  
I. A. Moralev ◽  
D. S. Sboev ◽  
S. N. Tolkachev ◽  
...  

The results of an experimental study of the effect of dielectric barrier discharge (DBR) actuator on laminar-turbulent transition in a three-dimensional boundary layer under influence of elevated free-stream turbulence are presented. The travelling cross-flow instability modes are dominated in transition in a base configuration. Their characteristics do not depend on a spanwise position. The DBD-actuator that generated stationary cross-flow vortices with the predefined spanwise wavelength when turned on was capable to reduce a turbulent spots production rate in comparison to the base regime.


1987 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 136-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. K. Sin ◽  
Ronald M. C. So

A technique employing a three-axis piezoelectric load cell is developed to measure local unsteady forces induced on cylinders placed in a cross flow. Verification of the technique is carried out with a two-dimensional circular cylinder. All measurements are made at a Reynolds number of ∼4.8 × 104 and a free-stream turbulence of ∼1.5 percent. The local two-dimensional unsteady lift measurement is found to be in excellent agreement with spanwise-averaged data reported in the literature, thereby validating the feasibility of the present technique. Steady and unsteady force measurements on finite-span circular cylinders are reported and compared with available data in the literature.


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