Some Experiments on the Reattachment of a Laminar Boundary Layer Separating From a Rearward Facing Step on a Flat Plate Aerofoil

1960 ◽  
Vol 64 (599) ◽  
pp. 668-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. W. F. Moore

Summary:The results of experiments on the reattachment of a laminar boundary layer, separating from a rearward facing step in a flat plate aerofoil, are correlated with the properties of the short leading edge bubble which forms on thin aerofoils near the stall.The experiments, comprising pressure measurements, Pitot explorations, liquid film and smoke studies, indicate that for all Reynolds numbers above the value given by the Owen-KIanfer criterion the reattachment is turbulent behind a stationary air reverse flow vortex bubble. It is also found that the reattachment is laminar for Reynolds numbers below the critical, which further supports Crabtree's interpretation of the Owen-KIanfer criterion in terms of the condition for the growth of turbulent bursts.

1988 ◽  
Vol 186 ◽  
pp. 223-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Y. Wang ◽  
I. I. Glass

The compressible laminar boundary-layer flows of a dilute gas-particle mixture over a semi-infinite flat plate are investigated analytically. The governing equations are presented in a general form where more reasonable relations for the two-phase interaction and the gas viscosity are included. The detailed flow structures of the gas and particle phases are given in three distinct regions: the large-slip region near the leading edge, the moderate-slip region and the small-slip region far downstream. The asymptotic solutions for the two limiting regions are obtained by using a series-expansion method. The finite-difference solutions along the whole length of the plate are obtained by using implicit four-point and six-point schemes. The results from these two methods are compared and very good agreement is achieved. The characteristic quantities of the boundary layer are calculated and the effects on the flow produced by the particles are discussed. It is found that in the case of laminar boundary-layer flows, the skin friction and wall heat-transfer are higher and the displacement thickness is lower than in the pure-gas case alone. The results indicate that the Stokes-interaction relation is reasonable qualitatively but not correct quantitatively and a relevant non-Stokes relation of the interaction between the two phases should be specified when the particle Reynolds number is higher than unity.


Author(s):  
Ladan Momayez ◽  
Marouen Dghim ◽  
Mohsen Ferchichi ◽  
Sylvain Graveline

This work reports an experimental investigation on the response of a planar wake generated by a profiled flat plate to various upstream flow conditions. A tripping wire was placed on the upper side of the flat plate just downstream of the leading edge of the plate that resulted in asymmetric separating shear layers at the trailing edge. The near wake asymmetry is compared to the symmetrical case at two different Reynolds numbers. Two asymmetric initial conditions resulted, namely, laminar boundary layer on the lower side and a turbulent boundary layer on the upper side, and a turbulent boundary layer on the lower side and tripped turbulent boundary layer on the upper surface. The near wake dynamics were investigated under the effects of the degree of asymmetry using hot-wire anemometry and flow visualizations. The measurements showed when one of the two boundary layers was tripped, the wake shifted towards the tripped side and wake spreading was found to be larger than in the case of the symmetrical wake with the effect being more pronounced in the asymmetric laminar wake. Self-similarity of the asymmetrical wakes was established by properly selecting appropriate similarity variables however, the similarity of the wake was less evident in the tripped laminar boundary layer case. Convection velocity, Uc, of the Von Karman large eddies, estimated using processed flow visualization images seemed to increase with increased Reynolds number and with increased upstream momentum thickness. In the symmetric laminar wake, Uc/U∞ increases from 0.2 and reached an asymptotic value of about 0.85 further downstream. In the presence of perturbation, Uc/U∞ attained a constant value of about 0.83 further downstream compared to the symmetric case. For the turbulent wake, however, asymmetry of the turbulence levels was found to increase the convection speed compared to both the laminar wake and the symmetric turbulent wake reaching a constant value nearly at the same downstream position for both the symmetric and asymmetric turbulent wake.


Author(s):  
E. J. Walsh ◽  
F. Brighenti ◽  
D. M. McEligot

The evolution of the laminar boundary layer over a flat plate under a free stream turbulence intensity of 1.3% is analysed. The effect of free stream turbulence on the onset of transition is one of the important sources leading to bypass transition. Such disturbances are of great interest in engineering for the prediction of transition on turbine blades. The study concentrates on the early part of the boundary layer, starting from the leading edge, and is characterised by the presence of streamwise elongated regions of high and low streamwise velocity. It is demonstrated that the so called “Klebanoff modes” are not entirely representative of the flow structures, due to the time-averaged representations used in most studies. For the conditions of this investigation it is found that the urms and the peak disturbances remain constant in the early stages of the transition development. This region, in which the streaks strength is constant, is problematic for many theories as it is not known where on a surface to initiate a growth theory calculation, and hence the prediction of transition onset is difficult. The observation that a constant urms region exists within the boundary layer under these conditions may be the source of great difficulty in predicting transition onset under turbulence levels around 1%. This region suggests that the streaks are either continuously generated and damped, or do not grow during the early stage of transition, and highlights the importance of continuous influence of the free stream turbulence along the boundary layer edge. This work concludes that the first is more likely, and furthermore the measurements are shown to agree with recent direct numerical simulations.


2001 ◽  
Vol 436 ◽  
pp. 321-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
NIKOLAOS A. PELEKASIS ◽  
JOHN A. TSAMOPOULOS

The flow of a gas stream past a flat plate under the influence of rainfall is investigated. As raindrops sediment on the flat plate, they coalesce to form a water film that flows under the action of shear from the surrounding gas stream. In the limit of (a) large Reynolds number, Re, in the gas phase, (b) small rainfall rate, r˙, compared to the free-stream velocity, U∞, and (c) small film thickness compared to the thickness of the boundary layer that surrounds it, a similarity solution is obtained that predicts growth of the liquid film like x3/4; x denotes dimensionless distance from the leading edge. The flow in the gas stream closely resembles the Blasius solution, whereas viscous dissipation dominates inside the film. Local linear stability analysis is performed, assuming nearly parallel base flow in the two streams, and operating in the triple-deck regime. Two distinct families of eigenvalues are identified, one corresponding to the well-known Tollmien–Schlichting (TS) waves that originate in the gas stream, and the other corresponding to an interfacial instability. It is shown that, for the air–water system, the TS waves are convectively unstable whereas the interfacial waves exhibit a pocket of absolute instability, at the streamwise location of the applied disturbance. Moreover, it is found that as the inverse Weber number (We−1) increases, indicating the increasing effect of surface tension compared to inertia, the pocket of absolute instability is translated towards larger distances from the leading edge and the growth rate of unstable waves decreases, until a critical value is reached, We−1 ≈ We−1c, beyond which the family of interfacial waves becomes convectively unstable. Increasing the inverse Froude number (Fr−1), indicating the increasing effect of gravity compared to inertia, results in the pocket of absolute instability shrinking until a critical value is reached, Fr−1 ≈ Fr−1c, beyond which the family of interfacial waves becomes convectively unstable. As We−1 and Fr−1 are further increased, interfacial waves are eventually stabilized, as expected. In this context, increasing the rainfall rate or the free-stream velocity results in extending the region of absolute instability over most of the airfoil surface. Owing to this behaviour it is conjectured that a global mode that interacts with the boundary layer may arise at the interface and, eventually, lead to three-dimensional waves (rivulets), or, under extreme conditions, even premature separation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 866 ◽  
pp. 239-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bofu Wang ◽  
Xuerui Mao ◽  
Tamer A. Zaki

Linear perturbation analyses of zero-pressure-gradient boundary layers at subcritical Reynolds numbers predict that transient disturbance amplification can take place due to the lift-up mechanism. Upstream, streamwise-elongated vortices yield the largest response per unit of inflow disturbance energy, which takes the form of streamwise-elongated streaks. In this work, we compute the linear and also nonlinear inflow disturbances that generate the largest response inside the boundary layer, for flow over a thin flat plate with a slender leading edge. In order to compare our results with earlier linear analyses, we constrain the inlet disturbance to be monochromatic in time, or a single frequency. The boundary layer effectively filters high frequencies, and only low-frequency perturbations induce a strong response downstream. The low-frequency optimal inflow disturbance has a spanwise wavenumber that scales with $\sqrt{Re}$, and it consists of streamwise and normal vorticity components: the latter is tilted around the leading edge into the streamwise direction and, further downstream, generates streaks. While none of the computed monochromatic disturbances alone can lead to breakdown to turbulence, secondary instability analyses demonstrate that the streaky base state is unstable. Nonlinear simulations where the inflow disturbance is supplemented with additional white noise undergo secondary instability and breakdown to turbulence.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. L. Kocharin ◽  
A. A. Yatskikh ◽  
D. S. Prishchepova ◽  
A. V. Panina ◽  
Yu. G. Yermolaev ◽  
...  

1951 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 211-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.D. Young ◽  
T.B. Booth

SummaryA method is developed for calculating the profile drag of a yawed wing of infinite span, based on the assumption that the form of the spanwise distribution of velocity in the boundary layer, whether laminar or turbulent, is insensitive to the chordwise pressure distribution. The form is assumed to be the same as that accepted for the boundary layer on an unyawed plate with zero external pressure gradient. Experimental evidence indicates that these assumptions are reasonable in this context. The method is applied to a flat plate and the N.A.C.A. 64-012 section at zero incidence for a range of Reynolds numbers between 106 and 108, angles of yaw up to 45°, and a range of transition point positions. It is shown that the drag coefficients of a flat plate varies with yaw as cos½ Λ (where Λ is the angle of yaw) if the boundary layer is completely laminar, and it varies as if the boundary layer is completely turbulent. The drag coefficient of the N.A.C.A. 64-012 section, however, varies closely as cos½ Λ for transition point positions between 0 and 0.5 c. Further calculations on wing sections of other shapes and thicknesses and more detailed experimental checks of the basic assumptions at higher Reynolds numbers are desirable.


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