rear stagnation point
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Author(s):  
Nurul Amira Zainal ◽  
Kohilavani Naganthran ◽  
Roslinda Nazar

The study of unsteady flow is essential in various engineering systems, for instance, the periodic fluid motion and start-up process. Therefore, this numerical study focuses on examining the unsteady magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) rear stagnation-point flow in Al2O3-Cu/H2O hybrid nanofluid past a permeable stretching/shrinking surface with the impact of heat generation/absorption. By choosing a suitable similarity transformation, partial differential equations are transformed into a system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations and solved using the bvp4c function in the MATLAB package. The effects of the solution domain’s operating parameters are analysed, and dual solutions are observable as the sheet shrinks. It is found that the addition of the suction parameter escalates the heat transfer efficiency. Eventually, the existence of the unsteadiness parameter and the heat generation/absorption effect significantly encourage heat transfer deterioration.


2021 ◽  
Vol 233 ◽  
pp. 109157
Author(s):  
Haiyang Yu ◽  
Wen-Li Chen ◽  
Yewei Huang ◽  
Hao Meng ◽  
Donglai Gao

2018 ◽  
Vol 839 ◽  
pp. 33-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Schuyler Hinman ◽  
Craig T. Johansen

A new theoretical framework, based on the analysis of Navier–Stokes solutions for the hypersonic laminar near wake of two-dimensional and axisymmetric blunt bodies, is presented. A semi-empirical relationship is derived between the free-stream Mach and Reynolds numbers and a characteristic wake Reynolds number. A control volume analysis was performed to assess the validity of some common assumptions used in the literature. Analysis of the momentum and vorticity equations is used to assess the dominant mechanisms of momentum transfer along and across the dividing streamline and centreline which enclose the near wake. An observed stagnation pressure gain along the dividing streamline is explained using the entropy transport equation, demonstrating an unbalance between entropy generation due to viscous dissipation and entropy diffusion. The rear-stagnation point flow is analysed using an analogy to a reversed flow jet which allows for the centreline Mach number to be solved. A new viscous–inviscid interaction theory is presented for the reattachment shock formation process for both planar and axisymmetric wakes. Finally, all of the sub-mechanisms are combined into an overall wake mechanism. The resulting equations constitute the first overall theoretical framework of the laminar near-wake mechanism including separation, reattachment, rear-stagnation point flow and dividing streamline stagnation pressure gain for both planar and axisymmetric near wakes. Scaling arguments are presented throughout the work for each of the key sub-mechanisms. Recommendations are made for how experimental and numerical results for the near wake should be presented. The equations and recommendations presented here are then used to perform a detailed disambiguation of laminar capsule studies in the literature.


2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (7) ◽  
pp. 1554-1570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustafa Turkyilmazoglu ◽  
Kohilavani Naganthran ◽  
Ioan Pop

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to present both an analytical and a numerical analysis of the unsteady magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) rear stagnation-point flow over off-centred deformable surfaces. Design/methodology/approach The numerical MATLAB solver bvp4c suitable for routine boundary value problem is used for the set of ordinary differential equations reduced from the governing partial differential equations. Findings Multiple solutions are found for particular eigenvalues. The physical solution is computed by the help of a linear stability analysis. The authors have succeeded in discovering the second solutions, and it is suggested that these solutions are unstable and not physically realisable in practice. The current findings add to a growing body of literature on MHD stagnation-point flow problems. It is also found that the governing parameters have different effects on the flow characteristics. Practical implications Even though problems of steady MHD flows have been extensively studied for stagnation-point flows, limited findings can be found on the unsteady MHD rear stagnation-point flow over off-centred deformable surfaces. Originality/value The originality of this work is the application of a magnetic field on a time-dependent MHD rear stagnation-point flow over off-centred deformable surfaces.


Author(s):  
Wenli Chen ◽  
Hui Li ◽  
Hui Hu

A passive jet flow control method was employed to suppress the unsteady vortex shedding from a circular cylinder at the Reynolds number level of Re = (0.18∼1.1)×105. The passive jet flow control was achieved by blowing jets from the holes near the rear stagnation point of the cylinder, which are connected to the in-take holes located near the front stagnation point through channels embedded inside the cylinder. Since a part of the oncoming flow would inhale into the in-take holes, flow through the embedded channels, and blow out from the holes near the rear stagnation point to suppress/manipulate the alternating vortex shedding in the wake flow behind the circular cylinder, the present passive jet flow control method does not require any additional energy inputs for the flow control. In the present study, the aerodynamic force (i.e., both lift and drag) acting the circular cylinder model with and without the passive jet flow control were compared quantitatively at different Reynolds numbers (i.e., different inlet mean speed). It was found that, in addition to almost eliminating the fluctuations of the lift forces acting on the cylinder, the passive jet flow control method was also found to reduce the mean drag acting on the cylinder model greatly. The instantaneous vorticity distributions and corresponding streamline patterns were used to reveal the underlying physics about why and how the passive jet flow control method can be used to suppress the alternating vortex shedding and induce a symmetrical wake pattern behind the cylinder model.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 388-421 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renkai Hong ◽  
Zhenhua Xia ◽  
Yipeng Shi ◽  
Zuoli Xiao ◽  
Shiyi Chen

AbstractCompressible flow past a circular cylinder at an inflow Reynolds number of 2x105is numerically investigated by using a constrained large-eddy simulation (CLES) technique. Numerical simulation with adiabatic wall boundary condition and at a free-stream Mach number of 0.75 is conducted to validate and verify the performance of the present CLES method in predicting separated flows. Some typical and characteristic physical quantities, such as the drag coefficient, the root-mean-square lift fluctuations, the Strouhal number, the pressure and skin friction distributions around the cylinder,etc.are calculated and compared with previously reported experimental data, finer-grid large-eddy simulation (LES) data and those obtained in the present LES and detached-eddy simulation (DES) on coarse grids. It turns out that CLES is superior to DES in predicting such separated flow and that CLES can mimic the intricate shock wave dynamics quite well. Then, the effects of Mach number on the flow patterns and parameters such as the pressure, skin friction and drag coefficients, and the cylinder surface temperature are studied, with Mach number varying from 0.1 to 0.95. Non-monotonic behaviors of the pressure and skin friction distributions are observed with increasing Mach number and the minimum mean separation angle occurs at a subcritical Mach number of between 0.3 and 0.5. Additionally, the wall temperature effects on the thermodynamic and aerodynamic quantities are explored in a series of simulations using isothermal wall boundary conditions at three different wall temperatures. It is found that the flow separates earlier from the cylinder surface with a longer recirculation length in the wake and a higher pressure coefficient at the rear stagnation point for higher wall temperature. Moreover, the influences of different thermal wall boundary conditions on the flow field are gradually magnified from the front stagnation point to the rear stagnation point. Moreover, the influences of different thermal wall boundary conditions on the flow field are graduallymagnified from the front stagnation point to the rear stagnation point. It is inferred that the CLES approach in its current version is a useful and effective tool for simulating wall-bounded compressible turbulent flows with massive separations.


Author(s):  
T. H. Reif ◽  
F. A. Kulacki

Crossflow over a porous circular cylinder, with uniform blowing at the surface, was investigated experimentally and numerically. Two free stream conditions, Reynolds numbers 4,100 and 6,200, and five dimensionless blowing rate parameters (ratio of surface blowing to free stream velocity), 0.000 to 0.190, were studied experimentally. For simplicity, results for only one Reynolds number and three blowing cases are presented. A low speed wind tunnel was designed and constructed to give time-smoothed average velocities in the range of 61–122 cm/s. The tunnel was calibrated prior to the study. Velocity and pressure profiles were uniform up to 3.81 cm from the walls of the test section. Turbulence intensity, measured at the center of the test section, was 3.0% with an absolute error of 0.5%. Using hot wire anemometry, time-smoothed velocity profiles were measured at several radial and angular positions from the front to the rear stagnation point. The maximum absolute error in the velocity measurements was 12 cm/s and the positional error of the probe was 0.00254 cm. The numerical study employed the finite element method. The flow field was modeled as two-dimensional with half-symmetry. The unsteady, turbulent (k/ε) model had 2,160 elements and 2,287 nodes. Convergence and laminar flow was verified. When blowing was present, the numerical solution was found to give excellent agreement with the experiments in the entire flow field. For the no blowing test case, the agreement with the experiments was also excellent up to 20 deg from the rear stagnation point. Flow visualization, using smoke, was used to qualitatively study the large scale secondary flows in the wake region. These results helped explain the poorer agreement for the no blowing test case.


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