1997 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary
Studies on By-Pass Transition of Boundary Layr
Project/Area Number |
08651090
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Research Category |
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)
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Allocation Type | Single-year Grants |
Section | 一般 |
Research Field |
Aerospace engineering
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Research Institution | Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Technology |
Principal Investigator |
ASAI Masahito Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Technology, Faculty of Engineering, Associate Professor, 工学部, 助教授 (00117988)
|
Project Period (FY) |
1996 – 1997
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Keywords | Fluid Mechanics / Boundary Layr / Laminar-Turbulent Transition / Turbulent Contamination / Hairpin Eddies / Critical Reynolds Number / 乱流 |
Research Abstract |
In the present study, the so-called by-pass boundary-layr transition caused by high-intensity disturbances is examined experimentally. Our knowledge of the boundary-layr response to such high-intensity disturbances is crucial, for instance, for understanding the attachment-line contamination on a swept wing. In addition, it is expected that the results give much information on the mechanism of wall turbulence generation and the related critical flow condition. The whole experiment is carried out in a wind tunnel with open jet type. A boundary-layr plate is set in the open test section. Well-controlled hairpin eddies is introduced in Blasius boundary layr at subcritical Reynolds numbers (for linear instability) through a small wall orifice. The results obtained are summarized below. Local turbulent patch created by the orifice-generated hairpin vortices can develop only at Reynolds numbers above R_<rheta>=130 (based on the momentum thickness). In such low-Reynolds number transition, the l
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ateral growth of turbulent patch is very weak, i.e., the lateral spreading angle is less than 2 deg. With increasing the Reynolds number, the lateral spreading angle is rapidly increased towards the typical value (10 deg) at high Reynolds numbers. The dependency of the lateral spreading angle of turbulent patch on R_<rheta> is clearly demonstrated in the present experiment. It is also worth noting that the growth of turbulent patch is highly dependent on the intensity of initial hairpin vortices in this subcritical boundary-layr transition. A key event observed is found to be successive growth of wall shear layrs (lifted up on low-speed streaks) with streamwise vortices into hairpin vortices, which is almost the same as the near-wall phenomena observed in the late stage of the ribbon-induced transition in plane Poiseille flow. Below the critical station (R_<rheta>=130), even if highly disturbed and once the wall streaks with streamwise vortices are created, they eventually decay downstream. Less
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Research Products
(6 results)