Time-Resolved PIV and Pressure Measurements of Oscillating and Pulsating Flow in a Rapid Expansion

Author(s):  
Barton L. Smith ◽  
Cameron V. King

Separating oscillating and pulsating flows in an internal adverse pressure gradient geometry are studied experimentally. Time-resolved PIV measurements and simultaneous pressure measurements reveal that, in oscillating flow, during the accelerating portion of the cycle, the flow remains attached in spite of a very large adverse pressure gradient. During the decelerating portion of the cycle, the flow is more prone to separation. The duration and extent of the separation depend strongly on the oscillation displacement amplitude relative to the cross-stream dimension. In some cases, the flow separates but reattaches as the separated shear layer is accelerated temporally. The time-varying pressure measurements are used to determine the resultant minor losses for the flow in each direction. These are found to be an increasing function of displacement amplitude and a decreasing function of the Reynolds number and can be greater than or less than those for steady flow. Pressure and velocity measurements are presented for pulsating flow with various DC components.

Author(s):  
Barton L. Smith ◽  
Kristen V. Mortensen ◽  
Spencer Wendel

Separating oscillating flow in an internal adverse pressure gradient geometry is studied experimentally. Phase-locked PIV measurements and simultaneous pressure measurements reveal that during the accelerating portion of the cycle, the flow remains attached in spite of a very large adverse pressure gradient. During the decelerating portion of the cycle, the flow is more prone to separation. The duration and extent of the separation depend strongly on the oscillation displacement amplitude relative to the cross-stream dimension. In some cases, the flow separates but reattaches as the separated shear layer is accelerated temporally. The time-varying pressure measurements are used to determine the resultant minor losses for the flow in each direction. These are found to be an increasing function of displacement amplitude and independent of the Reynolds number.


Author(s):  
Cameron V. King ◽  
Barton L. Smith

Separating oscillating and pulsating flows in an internal adverse pressure gradient geometry are studied experimentally. Simultaneous velocity-pressure measurements demonstrate that the minor losses associated with oscillating flow in an adverse pressure gradient geometry can be smaller or larger than for steady flow. The minor losses grow with increasing displacement amplitude in the range 10 < L0/h < 37. Losses decrease with Reδ in the range of 380 < Re < 740. The extent and duration of boundary separation increase with L0/h. It is found that the losses increase with increasing diffuser angle for 12° < θ < 30°. The addition of steady flow can cause the in decrease if the flow becomes more turbulent as a result, or increase when the flow was already turbulent.


2014 ◽  
Vol 748 ◽  
pp. 36-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pranav Joshi ◽  
Xiaofeng Liu ◽  
Joseph Katz

AbstractThis study focuses on the effects of mean (favourable) and large-scale fluctuating pressure gradients on boundary layer turbulence. Two-dimensional (2D) particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements, some of which are time-resolved, have been performed upstream of and within a sink flow for two inlet Reynolds numbers, ${Re}_{\theta }(x_{1})=3360$ and 5285. The corresponding acceleration parameters, $K$, are ${1.3\times 10^{-6}}$ and ${0.6\times 10^{-6}}$. The time-resolved data at ${Re}_{\theta }(x_{1})=3360$ enables us to calculate the instantaneous pressure distributions by integrating the planar projection of the fluid material acceleration. As expected, all the locally normalized Reynolds stresses in the favourable pressure gradient (FPG) boundary layer are lower than those in the zero pressure gradient (ZPG) domain. However, the un-scaled stresses in the FPG region increase close to the wall and decay in the outer layer, indicating slow diffusion of near-wall turbulence into the outer region. Indeed, newly generated vortical structures remain confined to the near-wall region. An approximate analysis shows that this trend is caused by higher values of the streamwise and wall-normal gradients of mean streamwise velocity, combined with a slightly weaker strength of vortices in the FPG region. In both boundary layers, adverse pressure gradient fluctuations are mostly associated with sweeps, as the fluid approaching the wall decelerates. Conversely, FPG fluctuations are more likely to accompany ejections. In the ZPG boundary layer, loss of momentum near the wall during periods of strong large-scale adverse pressure gradient fluctuations and sweeps causes a phenomenon resembling local 3D flow separation. It is followed by a growing region of ejection. The flow deceleration before separation causes elevated near-wall small-scale turbulence, while high wall-normal momentum transfer occurs in the ejection region underneath the sweeps. In the FPG boundary layer, the instantaneous near-wall large-scale pressure gradient rarely becomes positive, as the pressure gradient fluctuations are weaker than the mean FPG. As a result, the separation-like phenomenon is markedly less pronounced and the sweeps do not show elevated small-scale turbulence and momentum transfer underneath them. In both boundary layers, periods of acceleration accompanying large-scale ejections involve near-wall spanwise contraction, and a high wall-normal momentum flux at all elevations. In the ZPG boundary layer, although some of the ejections are preceded, and presumably initiated, by regions of adverse pressure gradients and sweeps upstream, others are not. Conversely, in the FPG boundary layer, there is no evidence of sweeps or adverse pressure gradients immediately upstream of ejections. Apparently, the mechanisms initiating these ejections are either different from those involving large-scale sweeps or occur far upstream of the peak in FPG fluctuations.


Fluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 199
Author(s):  
Vasudevan Kanjirakkad ◽  
Thomas Irps

The problem of laminar to turbulent transition in a boundary layer flow subjected to an adverse pressure gradient is relevant to many engineering applications. Under such conditions, the initially laminar flow within the boundary layer can undergo separation and then become turbulent upon reattachment, as transition is triggered by instabilities within the separated shear layer. In turbomachinery blades with high loading, the transition mechanism is further complicated by the presence of periodic wake disturbances shed by blades that move relatively in the upstream flow. The paper reports an experimental study of the effect of wake disturbances generated upstream on the development of a laminar boundary layer over a flat plate imposed with an adverse pressure gradient that is typical of a highly loaded front-stage compressor blade. Detailed velocity measurements using a hotwire are performed along the plate and the results are analysed both in the time domain and the frequency domain. Description of the major features identified is provided and the leading mechanisms that trigger the transition process are identified to be a possible combination of amplified Tollmien–Schlichting waves and the roll-up of vortices due to the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability of the separated shear layer.


Author(s):  
Christian E Willert ◽  
Matteo Novara ◽  
Daniel Schanz ◽  
Reinhard Geisler ◽  
Michael Schroll ◽  
...  

We report on measurements of the time-evolving velocity profile of a turbulent boundary layer subjected to a strong adverse pressure gradient (APG) at Reynolds numbers up to Reθ ≈ 55 000 with an upstream friction Reynolds number exceeding Reτ ≈ 10 000. Near the point of flow separation high-resolution imaging at high camera frame rates captured the time evolving velocity profile using the so-called “profile-PIV” technique in a nested imaging configuration of two cameras operating at different image magnifications. One camera used an image magnification better than unity to resolve the viscous scales directly at the wall while the remainder of the roughly 200 mm thick boundary layer is simultaneous captured by the second camera. In the APG the variance of the stream-wise velocity exhibits no “inner peak” commonly found in turbulent boundary layers without pressure gradient influence. Spectral analysis further shows that the peak energy within the boundary layer shifts away from the wall toward lower frequencies. The overlap between the simultaneously imaged areas allows to assess and, to first order, correct for the effect of spatial smoothing on statistical quantities, spectra and related quantities. A multi-frame cross-correlation algorithm was used to process the extensive data base. In addition, a newly developed 2D-2C “Shake-The-Box” algorithm (STB) provided highly resolved particle tracking data beyond the reach of conventional PIV processing.


Author(s):  
Matteo Novara ◽  
Daniel Schanz ◽  
Reinhard Geisler ◽  
Janos Agocs ◽  
Felix Eich ◽  
...  

A large-scale 3D Lagrangian particle tracking (LPT) investigation of a turbulent boundary layer (TBL) flow developing across different pressure gradient regions is presented in this study. Three high-speed multi-camera imaging systems, LED illumination and helium-filled soap bubbles (HFSB) tracers have been adopted to produce time-resolved sequences of particle images over a large volume encompassing approximately 3 m in the streamwise direction, 0:8 m in the spanwise direction and 0:25 m in the wall-normal direction. Individual tracers have been reconstructed and tracked within the imaged volume by means of the Shake-The-Box algorithm (STB, Schanz et al. (2016)); the FlowFit data assimilation algorithm (Gesemann et al. (2016)) has been used to evaluate the spatial velocity gradients and to interpolate the scattered LPT results onto a regular grid. Thanks to the large size of the investigated volume and to the time-resolved nature of the recorded images, the entire spatial extent of the large-scale coherent motions within the logarithmic region of the TBL (i.e. superstructures) could be captured and their dynamics investigated during their development over several boundary layer thickness in the streamwise direction, from the zero pressure gradient region (ZPG) to the adverse pressure gradient region (APG). Two free-stream velocities were investigated, namely 7 and 14m=s, corresponding to Ret ~ 3,000 and 5,000 respectively. The results confirm the location and scale of the elongated high- and low-momentum structures in the logarithmic region, as well as their meandering in the spanwise direction. Two-point correlation statistics show that the width and spacing of the superstructures are not affected by the transition from the ZPG to the APG region. The analysis of the instantaneous flow realizations from both a Lagrangian and Eulerian perspective indicates the presence of significant fluid particle elements exchange across the interfaces of the large-scale structures.


2009 ◽  
Vol 629 ◽  
pp. 263-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
SOURABH S. DIWAN ◽  
O. N. RAMESH

This is an experimental and theoretical study of a laminar separation bubble and the associated linear stability mechanisms. Experiments were performed over a flat plate kept in a wind tunnel, with an imposed pressure gradient typical of an aerofoil that would involve a laminar separation bubble. The separation bubble was characterized by measurement of surface-pressure distribution and streamwise velocity using hot-wire anemometry. Single component hot-wire anemometry was also used for a detailed study of the transition dynamics. It was found that the so-called dead-air region in the front portion of the bubble corresponded to a region of small disturbance amplitudes, with the amplitude reaching a maximum value close to the reattachment point. An exponential growth rate of the disturbance was seen in the region upstream of the mean maximum height of the bubble, and this was indicative of a linear instability mechanism at work. An infinitesimal disturbance was impulsively introduced into the boundary layer upstream of separation location, and the wave packet was tracked (in an ensemble-averaged sense) while it was getting advected downstream. The disturbance was found to be convective in nature. Linear stability analyses (both the Orr–Sommerfeld and Rayleigh calculations) were performed for mean velocity profiles, starting from an attached adverse-pressure-gradient boundary layer all the way up to the front portion of the separation-bubble region (i.e. up to the end of the dead-air region in which linear evolution of the disturbance could be expected). The conclusion from the present work is that the primary instability mechanism in a separation bubble is inflectional in nature, and its origin can be traced back to upstream of the separation location. In other words, the inviscid inflectional instability of the separated shear layer should be logically seen as an extension of the instability of the upstream attached adverse-pressure-gradient boundary layer. This modifies the traditional view that pegs the origin of the instability in a separation bubble to the detached shear layer outside the bubble, with its associated Kelvin–Helmholtz mechanism. We contend that only when the separated shear layer has moved considerably away from the wall (and this happens near the maximum-height location of the mean bubble), a description by the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability paradigm, with its associated scaling principles, could become relevant. We also propose a new scaling for the most amplified frequency for a wall-bounded shear layer in terms of the inflection-point height and the vorticity thickness and show it to be universal.


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