scholarly journals Experiments on Supersonic Boundary Layer Laminarization by Means of Foreign-Gas Injection

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 26-38
Author(s):  
V. I. Lysenko ◽  
B. V. Smorodsky ◽  
Yu. G. Yermolaev ◽  
A. A. Yatskih ◽  
A. D. Kosinov

Experimental investigation of the influence of the distributed heavy gas (sulfur hexafluoride, SF6) injection into the near-wall sub-layer of a boundary layer) on the hydrodynamic stability in relation to controlled disturbances of the supersonic flat-plate boundary-layer at free-stream Mach number M = 2 have been performed. It was for the first time in controlled experiments obtained that injection of this foreign gas leads to the boundary-layer stabilization that is manifested in reduction of disturbance amplification rates. Good quantitative agreement of collected experimental data with computations based on the linear stability theory is obtained.

2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 41-47
Author(s):  
Vladimir Lysenko ◽  
Sergey Gaponov ◽  
Boris Smorodsky ◽  
Yuri Yermolaev ◽  
Aleksandr Kosinov ◽  
...  

Theoretical and experimental investigation of the influence of porous-coating thickness on the stability of the supersonic flat-plate boundary layer at free-stream Mach number M = 2 have been performed. Good quantitative agreement of experimental data obtained with artificially generated disturbances performed on models with various porous inserts and calculations based on the linear stability theory has been achieved. It is shown that the increase of the porous-coating thickness leads to the boundary layer destabilization.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 65-74
Author(s):  
Sergey Gaponov ◽  
Yuri Yermolaev ◽  
Aleksandr Kosinov ◽  
Vladimir Lysenko ◽  
Nikolay Semionov ◽  
...  

In the present study we have performed combined theoretical and experimental investigation of the surface permeability influence on the linear stability of the supersonic flat-plate boundary layer at free-stream Mach number M = 2. Good quantitative agreement was obtained between the data calculated by the linear theory of stability and the data obtained in experiments with artificially generated disturbances performed on models with various porous inserts. It is shown that increase of the permeable surface pore size leads to the destabilization of the first instability modes propagating under arbitrary angles in the boundary layer


2016 ◽  
Vol 798 ◽  
pp. 751-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. I. Lysenko ◽  
S. A. Gaponov ◽  
B. V. Smorodsky ◽  
Yu. G. Yermolaev ◽  
A. D. Kosinov ◽  
...  

A joint theoretical and experimental investigation of the influence of the surface permeability and roughness on the stability and laminar–turbulent transition of a supersonic flat-plate boundary layer at a free-stream Mach number of $M_{\infty }=2$ has been performed. Good quantitative agreement of the experimental data obtained with artificially generated disturbances performed on models with various porous inserts and calculations based on linear stability theory has been achieved. An increase of the pore size and porous-coating thickness leads to a boundary layer destabilization that accelerates the laminar–turbulent transition. It is shown that as a certain (critical) roughness value is reached, with an increase in the thickness of the rough and porous coating, the boundary layer stability diminishes and the laminar–turbulent transition is displaced towards the leading edge of the model.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-56
Author(s):  
Vladimir Lysenko ◽  
Boris Smorodsky ◽  
Yuri Yermolaev ◽  
Sergey Gaponov ◽  
Aleksandr Kosinov ◽  
...  

The experimental investigation of the influence of the distributed blowing of heavy gas (sulfur hexafluoride of SF6) into the wall layer of supersonic flat-plate boundary layer (at free-stream Mach number M = 2) on the laminar-turbulent transition have been performed. For the first time experimentally it is shown that in case of such blowing there is a boundary-layer stabilization, and the laminar-turbulent transition is removed from the model leading edge.


2017 ◽  
Vol 817 ◽  
pp. 80-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Marensi ◽  
Pierre Ricco ◽  
Xuesong Wu

The nonlinear response of a compressible boundary layer to unsteady free-stream vortical fluctuations of the convected-gust type is investigated theoretically and numerically. The free-stream Mach number is assumed to be of $O(1)$ and the effects of compressibility, including aerodynamic heating and heat transfer at the wall, are taken into account. Attention is focused on low-frequency perturbations, which induce strong streamwise-elongated components of the boundary-layer disturbances, known as streaks or Klebanoff modes. The amplitude of the disturbances is intense enough for nonlinear interactions to occur within the boundary layer. The generation and nonlinear evolution of the streaks, which acquire an $O(1)$ magnitude, are described on a self-consistent and first-principle basis using the mathematical framework of the nonlinear unsteady compressible boundary-region equations, which are derived herein for the first time. The free-stream flow is studied by including the boundary-layer displacement effect and the solution is matched asymptotically with the boundary-layer flow. The nonlinear interactions inside the boundary layer drive an unsteady two-dimensional flow of acoustic nature in the outer inviscid region through the displacement effect. A close analogy with the flow over a thin oscillating airfoil is exploited to find analytical solutions. This analogy has been widely employed to investigate steady flows over boundary layers, but is considered herein for the first time for unsteady boundary layers. In the subsonic regime the perturbation is felt from the plate in all directions, while at supersonic speeds the disturbance only propagates within the dihedron defined by the Mach line. Numerical computations are performed for carefully chosen parameters that characterize three practical applications: turbomachinery systems, supersonic flight conditions and wind tunnel experiments. The results show that nonlinearity plays a marked stabilizing role on the velocity and temperature streaks, and this is found to be the case for low-disturbance environments such as flight conditions. Increasing the free-stream Mach number inhibits the kinematic fluctuations but enhances the thermal streaks, relative to the free-stream velocity and temperature respectively, and the overall effect of nonlinearity becomes weaker. An abrupt deviation of the nonlinear solution from the linear one is observed in the case pertaining to a supersonic wind tunnel. Large-amplitude thermal streaks and the strong abrupt stabilizing effect of nonlinearity are two new features of supersonic flows. The present study provides an accurate signature of nonlinear streaks in compressible boundary layers, which is indispensable for the secondary instability analysis of unsteady streaky boundary-layer flows.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-45
Author(s):  
Vladimir Lysenko ◽  
Boris Smorodsky ◽  
Yuri Yermolaev ◽  
Aleksandr Kosinov ◽  
Nikolay Semionov

Joint theoretical and experimental investigation of the influence of surface permeability and roughness on stability and laminar-turbulent transition of the supersonic flat-plate boundary layer at free-stream Mach number M = 2 have been performed. Good quantitative agreement of experimental data obtained with artificially generated disturbances performed on models with various porous inserts and calculations based on the linear stability theory has been achieved. At research of the joint effect of the model surface permeability and roughness on the boundary layer stability and transition, it is shown that, as a certain (critical) roughness value is reached, with the rough and porous coating thickness increase, the boundary layer stability diminishes and the laminar-turbulent transition is displaced toward the model leading edge.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-15
Author(s):  
Sergey Gaponov ◽  
Boris Smorodsky

Theoretical investigation of the properties of a compressible binary-mixture boundary-layer in the framework of local self-similar boundary-layer equations. We have considered the problem, when the foreign gas of various molecular weights – lighter and heavier than air – has been injected into the flat-plate boundary-layer through the permeable model surface. Computations of the binarymixture velocity, density and temperature profiles as well as foreign gas concentration in such boundary layers at different Mach numbers have been performed. It has been found that increase of a foreign gas injection leads to a monotonous decrease of the skin friction and heat transfer coefficients. It has been established that at free stream Mach number M‹2 action of a heavy gas injection from the model surface into the boundary layer is similar to the action of the model cooling. This injection increases the density of the mixture near the wall. As a result, the profiles of the supersonic boundary layer are modified in such a way that the boundary-layer linear stability should be increased with injection of a foreign gas with high molecular weight. This in turn should lead to a shift in position of the laminar-turbulent transition downstream.


1999 ◽  
Vol 380 ◽  
pp. 169-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. LEIB ◽  
DAVID W. WUNDROW ◽  
M. E. GOLDSTEIN

This paper is concerned with the effect of free-stream turbulence on the pretransitional flat-plate boundary layer. It is assumed that either the turbulent Reynolds number or the downstream distance (or both) is small enough that the flow can be linearized. The dominant disturbances in the boundary layer, which are of the Klebanoff type, are governed by the linearized unsteady boundary-region equations, i.e. the linearized Navier–Stokes equations with the streamwise derivatives neglected in the viscous and pressure-gradient terms. The turbulence is represented as a superposition of vortical free-stream Fourier modes and the corresponding Fourier component solutions to the boundary-region equations are obtained numerically. The results are then superposed to compute the root mean square of the fluctuating streamwise velocity in the boundary layer produced by the actual free-stream turbulence. It is found that the disturbances computed with isotropic free-stream turbulence do not reach the levels measured in experiments. However, good quantitative agreement is obtained with the relatively low turbulent Reynolds number data of Kendall when the measured strong anisotropy of the low-frequency portion of his spectrum is accounted for. Data at higher turbulent Reynolds numbers are affected by nonlinearity, which manifests itself through the generation of small spanwise length scales. We attempt to model this within the context of the linear theory by choosing a free-stream spectrum whose energy is concentrated at larger transverse wavenumbers and achieve very good agreement with the data. The results suggest that even small deviations from pure isotropy can be an important factor in explaining the large amplitudes of the Klebanoff modes in the pre-transitional boundary layer, and also point to the importance of nonlinear effects. We discuss some additional effects that may need to be accounted for in order to obtain a complete description of the Klebanoff modes.


2010 ◽  
Vol 668 ◽  
pp. 113-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTIAN S. J. MAYER ◽  
STEFAN WERNZ ◽  
HERMANN F. FASEL

The transition process in a supersonic flat-plate boundary layer at Mach 2 is investigated numerically using linear stability theory (LST) and direct numerical simulations (DNS). The experimental investigations by Kosinov and his co-workers serve as a reference and provide the physical conditions for the numerical set-up. In these experiments, the weakly nonlinear regime of transition was studied. This led to the discovery of asymmetric subharmonic resonance triads, which appear to be relevant for transition in a Mach 2 boundary layer. These triads were composed of one primary oblique wave of frequency 20kHz and two oblique subharmonic waves of frequency 10kHz. While the experimentalists have focused on this new breakdown mechanism, we have found that the experimental data also indicate the presence of another mechanism related to oblique breakdown. This might be the first experimental evidence of the oblique breakdown mechanism in a supersonic boundary layer. With the simulations presented here, the possible presence of oblique breakdown mechanisms in the experiments is explored by deliberately suppressing subharmonic resonances in the DNS and by comparing the numerical results with the experimental data. The DNS results show excellent agreement with the experimental measurements for both linear and nonlinear transition stages. Most importantly, the results clearly show the characteristic features of oblique breakdown. In addition, we also investigated the subharmonic transition route using LST and DNS. When forcing both the subharmonic and the fundamental frequencies in the DNS, a subharmonic resonance mechanism similar to that in the experiments can be observed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-61
Author(s):  
Vladimir I. Lysenko ◽  
Sergey A. Gaponov ◽  
Boris V. Smorodsky ◽  
Alexander D. Kosinov ◽  
Mikhail I. Yaroslavtsev

Theoretical investigation of the supersonic flat-plate boundary-layer properties under conditions of the surface material sublimation has been performed for Mach number M = 2. Naphthalene (C10H8) was chosen as the substance for the sublimation coating. Performed computations show that with increasing surface temperature due to stagnation temperature increase, the mass flow rate of naphthalene evaporation increases. Calculations performed on the basis of linear stability theory show that such an increase of evaporation leads to a noticeable decrease of the local growth rates of unstable perturbations in the boundary layer. It is found that stabilization of the boundary layer by the surface coating sublimation occurs with increasing temperature of the sublimation coating, reaching a maximum near the triple point temperature of the sublimation material. The carried out experiments confirmed the stabilizing effect of surface sublimation.


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