PRELIMINARY STUDY ON CORRELATION BETWEEN THE SHAPE PARAMETER AND THE SKIN FRICTION COEFFICIENT IN TRANSITIONAL ZERO PRESSURE GRADIENT BOUNDARY LAYER

Author(s):  
P. Jonáš
Author(s):  
Pranav Joshi ◽  
Joseph Katz

The goal of this research is to study the effect of favorable pressure gradient (FPG) on the near wall structures of a turbulent boundary layer on a smooth wall. 2D-PIV measurements have been performed in a sink flow, initially at a coarse resolution, to characterize the development of the mean flow and (under resolved) Reynolds stresses. Lack of self-similarity of mean velocity profiles shows that the boundary layer does not attain the sink flow equilibrium. In the initial phase of acceleration, the acceleration parameter, K = v/U2dU/dx, increases from zero to 0.575×10−6, skin friction coefficient decreases and mean velocity profiles show a log region, but lack universality. Further downstream, K remains constant, skin friction coefficient increases and the mean velocity profiles show a second log region away from the wall. In the initial part of the FPG region, all the Reynolds stress components decrease over the entire boundary layer. In the latter phase, they continue to decrease in the middle of the boundary layer, and increase significantly close to the wall (below y∼0.15δ), where they collapse when normalized with the local freestream velocity. Turbulence production and wallnormal transport, scaled with outer units, show self-similar profiles close to the wall in the constant K region. Spanwise-streamwise plane data shows evidence of low speed streaks in the log layer, with widths scaling with the boundary layer thickness.


1954 ◽  
Vol 58 (518) ◽  
pp. 109-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Preston

SummaryA simple method of determining local turbulent skin friction on a smooth surface has been developed which utilises a round pitot tube resting on the surface. Assuming the existence of a region near the surface in which conditions are functions only of the skin friction, the relevant physical constants of the fluid and a suitable length, a universal non-dimensional relation is obtained for the difference between the total pressure recorded by the tube and the static pressure at the wall, in terms of the skin friction. This relation, on this assumption, is independent of the pressure gradient. The truth and form of the relation were first established, to a considerable degree of accuracy, in a pipe using four geometrically similar round pitot tubes—the diameter being taken as representative length. These four pitot tubes were then used to determine the local skin friction coefficient at three stations on a wind tunnel wall, under varying conditions of pressure gradient. At each station, within the limits of experimental accuracy, the deduced skin friction coefficient was found to be the same for each pitot tube, thus confirming the basic assumption and leaving little doubt as to the correctness of the skin friction so found. Pitot traverses were then made in the pipe and in the boundary layer on the wind tunnel wall. The results were plotted in two non-dimensional forms on the basis already suggested and they fell close together in a region whose outer limit represented the breakdown of the basic assumption, but close to the wall the results spread out, due to the unknown displacement of the effective centre of a pitot tube near a wall. This again provides further evidence of the existence of a region of local dynamical similarity and of the correctness of the skin friction deduced from measurements with round pitot tubes on the wind tunnel wall. The extent of the region in which the local dynamical similarity may be expected to hold appears to vary from about 1/5 to 1/20 of the boundary-layer thickness for conditions remote from, and close to, separation respectively.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 16-26
Author(s):  
Vladimir Kornilov ◽  
Andrey Boiko ◽  
Ivan Kavun ◽  
Anatoliy Popkov

A generalized analysis of the results of numerical and experimental studies of air blowing into a turbulent boundary layer through finely perforated surface consisting of alternating permeable and impermeable sections of varying length providing a sudden change in the flow conditions at the boundaries of these sections is presented. The air blowing coefficient Cb determined by the mass flow rate per unit area of the active perforated sample varied in the range from 0 to 0.008. It is shown that as Cb grows, the maximum reduction in the mean surface skin-friction coefficient CF, which is the value through the permeable area of perforated sample, reaches about 65 %. When keeping the equal mass flow rate Q for all tested combinations, the mean skin-friction coefficient remains constant, independent of geometrical parameters of permeable and impermeable sections. Increasing the length of the last permeable section leads to the growth of relaxation region which is characterized by the reduced skin friction values on the impermeable part of the flat plate.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kourta ◽  
G. Petit ◽  
J. C. Courty ◽  
J. P. Rosenblum

The control of subsonic high lift induced separation on airfoil may improve the flight envelope of current aircraft or even simplify the complex and heavy high-lift devices on commercial airframes. Until now, synthetic jets have proved a really interesting efficiency to delay or remove even leading-edge located separated areas on high-lift configuration but are not efficient for real scale aircrafts. In case of pressure-like separation (i.e. from trailing-edge), synthetic jets can be replaced by so the called “Vortex Generator Jets” which create strong longitudinal vortices that increase mixing in inner boundary layer and consequently the skin friction coefficient is increased to prevent separation. In this study, numerical simulations were undertaken on a generic three dimensional flat plate in order to quantify the effect of the longitudinal vortices on the natural skin friction coefficient. Both counter and co-rotative devices were tested at different exhaust velocities and distances between each others. Finally co-rotative vortex generators jets were tested on a three dimensional generic airfoil ONERA D. Results show a delay of the separation occurence but this solution does not seem to be as robust as synthetic jets. The study of jets spacing with respect to the efficiency of the devices shows a maximum for a given ratio of spacing to exhaust velocity.


2007 ◽  
Vol 129 (8) ◽  
pp. 1058-1072 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Tachie ◽  
K. K. Adane

A particle image velocimetry was used to study shallow open channel turbulent flow over d-type and k-type transverse ribs of square, circular, and semi-circular cross sections. The ratio of boundary layer thickness to depth of flow varied from 50% to 90%. The mean velocities and turbulent quantities were evaluated at the top plane of the ribs to characterize interaction between the cavities and overlying boundary layer. It was found that the overlying boundary layer interacts more strongly with k-type cavities than observed for d-type cavities. The profiles of the mean velocities and turbulent statistics were then spatially averaged over a pitch, and these profiles were used to study the effects of rib type and cross section on the flow field. The mean velocity gradients were found to be non-negligible across the boundary layer, and the implications of this observation for momentum transport, eddy viscosity, and mixing length distributions are discussed. The results show that the skin friction coefficient, Reynolds stresses and mixing length distributions are independent of rib cross section for d-type. For the k-type ribs, significant variations in skin friction coefficient values, mean flow, and turbulence fields are observed between square ribs and circular/semi-circular ribs.


2011 ◽  
Vol 686 ◽  
pp. 507-533 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Inoue ◽  
D. I. Pullin

AbstractA near-wall subgrid-scale (SGS) model is used to perform large-eddy simulation (LES) of the developing, smooth-wall, zero-pressure-gradient flat-plate turbulent boundary layer. In this model, the stretched-vortex, SGS closure is utilized in conjunction with a tailored, near-wall model designed to incorporate anisotropic vorticity scales in the presence of the wall. Large-eddy simulations of the turbulent boundary layer are reported at Reynolds numbers ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } $ based on the free-stream velocity and the momentum thickness in the range ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } = 1{0}^{3} \text{{\ndash}} 1{0}^{12} $. Results include the inverse square-root skin-friction coefficient, $ \sqrt{2/ {C}_{f} } $, velocity profiles, the shape factor $H$, the von Kármán ‘constant’ and the Coles wake factor as functions of ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } $. Comparisons with some direct numerical simulation (DNS) and experiment are made including turbulent intensity data from atmospheric-layer measurements at ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } = O(1{0}^{6} )$. At extremely large ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } $, the empirical Coles–Fernholz relation for skin-friction coefficient provides a reasonable representation of the LES predictions. While the present LES methodology cannot probe the structure of the near-wall region, the present results show turbulence intensities that scale on the wall-friction velocity and on the Clauser length scale over almost all of the outer boundary layer. It is argued that LES is suggestive of the asymptotic, infinite Reynolds number limit for the smooth-wall turbulent boundary layer and different ways in which this limit can be approached are discussed. The maximum ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } $ of the present simulations appears to be limited by machine precision and it is speculated, but not demonstrated, that even larger ${\mathit{Re}}_{\theta } $ could be achieved with quad- or higher-precision arithmetic.


2019 ◽  
Vol 875 ◽  
pp. 1175-1203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjie Zheng ◽  
Shanxin Ruan ◽  
Yue Yang ◽  
Lin He ◽  
Shiyi Chen

We develop a model of the skin-friction coefficient based on scalar images in the compressible, spatially evolving boundary-layer transition. The images are extracted from a passive scalar field by a sliding window filter on the streamwise and wall-normal plane. The multi-scale and multi-directional geometric analysis is applied to characterize the averaged inclination angle of spatially evolving filtered component fields at different scales ranging from a boundary-layer thickness to several viscous length scales. In general, the averaged inclination angles increase along the streamwise direction, and the variation of the angles for large-scale structures is smaller than that for small-scale structures. Inspired by the coincidence of the increasing averaged inclination angle and the rise of the skin-friction coefficient, we propose a simple image-based model of the skin-friction coefficient. The model blends empirical formulae of the skin-friction coefficient in laminar and fully developed turbulent regions using the normalized averaged inclination angle of scalar structures at intermediate and small scales. The model prediction calculated from scalar images is validated by the results from the direct numerical simulation at two Mach numbers, 2.25 and 6, and the relative error can be less than 15 %.


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