Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Controlled, Small-Scale Motions in a Turbulent Shear Layer Bojan Vukasinovic, Ari Glezer Woodruff School of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Boundary layer with pressure gradient in flow direction.
Advertisements

P.W. Terry K.W. Smith University of Wisconsin-Madison Outline
Instructor: André Bakker
13.42 Lecture: Vortex Induced Vibrations
Convection.
Boundary Layer Flow Describes the transport phenomena near the surface for the case of fluid flowing past a solid object.
Dr. Kirti Chandra Sahu Department of Chemical Engineering IIT Hyderabad.
Application of Boundary Element Methods in Modeling Multidimensional Flame- Acoustic Interactions Tim Lieuwen and Ben T. Zinn Depts. Of Mechanical and.
Pharos University ME 352 Fluid Mechanics II
Large-eddy simulation of flow and pollutant dispersion in urban street canyons under different thermal stratifications W. C. Cheng and Chun-Ho Liu * Department.
Modeling Generation and Nonlinear Evolution of Plasma Turbulence for Radiation Belt Remediation Center for Space Science & Engineering Research Virginia.
Quantification of Laminar flow weakness … P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department I I T Delhi Instability Analysis of Laminar Flows.
Experimental investigations of the flow during the stage separation of a space transportation system Andrew Hay Aerospace Engineering with German.
Dr. Laila Guessous Suresh Putta, M.S. Student Numerical Investigations of Pulsatile Flows To develop a better understanding of the characteristics of pulsating.
Baroclinic Instability in the Denmark Strait Overflow and how it applies the material learned in this GFD course Emily Harrison James Mueller December.
CHE/ME 109 Heat Transfer in Electronics
Boundary Layer Correction of Viscous Flow Through 2 D Turbine Cascades
Wind Modeling Studies by Dr. Xu at Tennessee State University
© 2011 Autodesk Freely licensed for use by educational institutions. Reuse and changes require a note indicating that content has been modified from the.
A H. Kyotoh, b R. Nakamura & a P. J. Baruah a a Institute of Engineering Mechanics and Systems, University of Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan b Third Plan Design.
Lorentz Centre, 19 Sep Particle transport and flow modification in planar temporally evolving mixing layers Djamel Lakehal, Chidambaram Narayanan.
Flow Control over Swept Edges Demetri Telionis Dept. of Engineering Science and Mechanics.
Fluid Mechanics Laboratory University of Kentucky Active Control of Separation on a Wing with Conformal Camber David Munday and Jamey Jacob Department.
Engineering Engineer -> μηχανικος Engineering ?-> μηχανικη ?? (College of Engineering -> ???) Engineers create: -design and build machines, structures.
1 LES of Turbulent Flows: Lecture 16 (ME EN ) Prof. Rob Stoll Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Utah Fall 2014.
Dynamics of ITG driven turbulence in the presence of a large spatial scale vortex flow Zheng-Xiong Wang, 1 J. Q. Li, 1 J. Q. Dong, 2 and Y. Kishimoto 1.
Numerical simulations of thermal counterflow in the presence of solid boundaries Andrew Baggaley Jason Laurie Weizmann Institute Sylvain Laizet Imperial.
LES of Turbulent Flows: Lecture 2 (ME EN )
The Stability of Laminar Flows - 2
Numerical study of flow instability between two cylinders in 2D case V. V. Denisenko Institute for Aided Design RAS.
STABLY STRATIFIED SHEAR-PRODUCED TURBULENCE AND LARGE-SCALE-WAVES IN A LID DRIVEN CAVITY BEN-GURION UNIVERSITY OF THE NEGEV FACULTY OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES.
Sheared stably stratified turbulence and
Convection in Flat Plate Boundary Layers P M V Subbarao Associate Professor Mechanical Engineering Department IIT Delhi A Universal Similarity Law ……
Laser Energy Deposition for Control of Turbulent Mixing Layers Liliana Saldana University of Arizona Advisor: Dr. Jesse Little Assistant Professor, Department.
IT SB RAS1 DMD analysis of coherent structures in a turbulent forced jet S.S. Abdurakipov, V.M. Dulin, D.M. Markovich Institute of Thermophysics, Novosibirsk,
Chapter 3. Instability of the free plane and near – wall plane jet
Scales of Motion, Reynolds averaging September 22.
MITE Mixing Control of Fuel Jets Using Synthetic Jet Technology: Velocity Field Measurements Staci A. Davis and Ari Glezer Woodruff School of Mechanical.
Laminar flows have a fatal weakness … P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department I I T Delhi Evolution & Stability of Laminar Boundary.
Turbulent Convection and Anomalous Cross-Field Transport in Mirror Plasmas V.P. Pastukhov and N.V. Chudin.
Interaction between vortex flow and microturbulence Zheng-Xiong Wang (王正汹) Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China West Lake International Symposium.
Convection Heat Transfer in Manufacturing Processes P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department I I T Delhi Mode of Heat Transfer due to.
Heat Transfer Su Yongkang School of Mechanical Engineering # 1 HEAT TRANSFER CHAPTER 6 Introduction to convection.
Chapter 1: Basic Concepts
Vertical Axis Wind Turbine Noise
Subject Name: FLUID MECHANICS Subject Code:10ME36B Prepared By: R Punith Department: Aeronautical Engineering Date:
Simulation of a self-propelled wake with small excess momentum in a stratified fluid Matthew de Stadler and Sutanu Sarkar University of California San.
Chapter 6: Introduction to Convection
Introduction to the Turbulence Models
Ship Hydrodynamics - Resistance
Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes Equations -- RANS
Introduction to Symmetry Analysis
WHAT CONTROLS BAR MIGRATION IN TIDAL CHANNELS?
DYNAMIC STALL OCCURRENCE ON A HORIZONTAL AXIS WIND TURBINE BLADE
C. F. Panagiotou and Y. Hasegawa
An Analytical Model for A Wind Turbine Wake
MAE 5130: VISCOUS FLOWS Lecture 1: Introduction and Overview
Flow Control over Trapezoidal-Wing Planforms with Sharp Edges
Sunny Ri Li, Nasser Ashgriz
Introduction 1 - Separation 1.1 What is separation?
Fundamentals of Convection
AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF FLOW AROUND SURFACE-MOUNTED PYRAMIDS
Accurate Flow Prediction for Store Separation from Internal Bay M
Turbulent Kinetic Energy (TKE)
Accurate Flow Prediction for Store Separation from Internal Bay M
Convective Heat Transfer
Schlieren study of circular and square cylinder wakes: Effect of buoyancy and oscillation This presentation contains videos of schlieren patterns generated.
Turbulent properties:
Turbulence 1: Turbulent Boundary layer
Lecture 4 Dr. Dhafer A .Hamzah
Presentation transcript:

Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Controlled, Small-Scale Motions in a Turbulent Shear Layer Bojan Vukasinovic, Ari Glezer Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Zvi Rusak Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Controlled Vorticity Manipulation single-stream shear layer U0 shear layer backward-facing step Interaction with baseline flow through the free stream

Controlled Vorticity Manipulation single-stream shear layer initial interaction region U0 shear layer vorticity source backward-facing step Interaction with baseline flow through the free stream Vorticity source (e.g., synthetic jet actuator) High-frequency vorticity ejection Actuation frequency can be varied

Controlled Vorticity Manipulation single-stream shear layer initial interaction region U0 shear layer vorticity source backward-facing step Interaction with baseline flow through the free stream Vorticity source (e.g., synthetic jet actuator) High-frequency vorticity ejection Actuation frequency can be varied Vortex circulation is adjustable Wall shear stress and turbulent production are altered

Vorticity Source f = 500 Hz (Uj = 20 m/s) f = 1000 Hz (Uj = 30 m/s) f = 2000 Hz (Uj = 30 m/s) 0.2H f = 0 180 0 180 0 180 Control actuators generate synthetic jets into the cross flow Nominal jets issued at f = 2000 Hz (St ~ 7) Jets can be synthetisized from 2000 to 200 Hz with decreasing Uj

High-Frequency (Dissipative) Control uncontrolled U0 ln controlled U0 high-frequency actuation Lre-em >> ln Stabilized Shear Layer (Stanek’s Model) Emergence of Inviscid Instability INCREASED DECREASED production, dissipation HF Domain I II III Region I: HF Actuation increased dissipation and turbulent production leads to modification of the time-averaged baseline. Region II: Stabilized Shear Layer suppression of fundamental coherent vortices formation, reduced turbulent production and dissipation. Region III: Re-emergence of Inviscid Instability at a lower frequency.

Experimental Facility Closed-loop, low-speed wind tunnel; free stream turbulence intensity ~ 0.5% test section 10”  16”  52” synthetic jets Flow-diagnostics H x U0 y Particle image velocimetry (PIV) Hot-wire anemometry (HWA) trip wire

Theoretical Tools I Mathematical Model 2-D, unsteady, incompressible viscous flow Navier-Stokes equations in vorticity and stream function formulation

Theoretical Tools II | ψ ω x/H | ψ x/H δ Linear temporal and spatial stability studies; natural frequency ωn along base shear layer Second-order stability analysis; the flow linear frequency response; ; perturbation’s amplitude shape function periodic in time and space 0< ω < 2ωn,max ω > 2ωn,max | ψ ω x/H | ψ x/H δ

Theoretical Tools III Nonlinear parabolic stability equations (NPSE); nonlinear interaction between M+1 modes 2M+1 parabolic equations Integrated numerically Linear Non Linear

The Unforced (Baseline) Flow measurement domain shear layer evolution y x PIV 0.5H HWA 2.5H -0.5H -0.5H H = 50.8 mm q0 ~ 0.35 mm Reqo ~ 470 ReH ~ 43,000 0.5 y/H -0.5 1 2 x/H

Computed Baseline Flow Experimental baseline flow conditions matched within measurement domain y/H x/H b 1 x/H 2 -0.5 y/H 0.5 a y/H x/H c Full computational domain: Extended spatial domain Reduced temporal domain

The Unforced (Baseline) Flow EXPERIMENTAL: disturbance amplification ANALYTICAL: most amplified frequency -0.2 y/H 0.5 1.0 x/H 300 Hz 200 Hz 100 Hz 50 Hz ● local stability theory The local natural frequency decreases along the expanding shear layer Agreement with experimental results of most amplified frequencies

Continuous High-frequency Actuation momentum coefficient Cm= rUj2bj/(rU02H) phase average ensemble average 0.25 Cm = 4  10-3 0.5 y/H -0.25 -0.5 0.25 26  10-3 0.5 y/H -0.25 -0.5 0.25 51  10-3 0.5 -0.5 y/H -0.25 0.25 0.5 0.75 1 2 x/H x/H

Continuous High-Frequency Actuation f = 2000 Hz Cm = 26  10-3 ensemble average phase averaged 1 2 x/H 0.5 -0.5 y/H 0.25 0.5 0.75 -0.25 f = 100 f = 140 f = 180 f = 220 f = 260 f = 300 f = 340 f = 20 f = 60 x/bj 15 12 y/bj Temporal and spatial alteration of the BL vorticity CCW vortex displaced and accelerated around CW vortex f = 2000 Hz Cm= rUj2bj/(rU02H) = 4, 26, 51, 69  10-3

Characterization of the Forced Shear Layer: Mean Flow Cm103 x/H = 0.1 –○– 0 –■– 4 –▲– 26 –♦– 51 momentum thickness x/q0 q/q0 0.5 1.0 weak forcing (Cm = 4  10-3) does not alter the baseline flow b and q increase with Cm 2.0

Characterization of the Forced Shear Layer: Natural Frequency EXPERIMENTAL: disturbance amplification ANALYTICAL: most amplified frequency 300 Hz Cm = 4  10-3 x/H fn [Hz] Cm103 26  10-3 –♦– 0 –▲– 26 51  10-3 Local natural frequency lowered by the actuation Relates to the shear layer thickening

NPSE Computed Flows MODE 6 ACTUATION NO ACTUATION StH = 0.97 m = 2 NPSE calculation (6 modes are used): vorticity perturbations field is presented In the “natural” case (a), the low-frequency mode dominates In the “actuated” case (b) of increased amplitude of mode 6, high frequency mode dominates

Reynolds Stresses 0.1 0.5 1.0 2.0 Cm103 y/H -0.5 x/H x/H x/H x/H x/H

Turbulent Kinetic Energy Cm103 0.5 Cm = 0 –○– 0 –■– 4 –▲– 26 –♦– 51 y/H -0.5 0.5 4  10-3 y/H -0.5 0.5 26  10-3 y/H -0.5 0.5 51  10-3 y/H -0.5 1 2 x/H x/H

Energy Transfer: StH = 7.36 cross-over frequency fc fc x/H 0.2 -0.2 y/H Cm = 4  10-3 x/H 0.2 -0.2 y/H 26  10-3 Cm = 4  10-3 0.2 -0.2 y/H 51  10-3 0.2 -0.2 y/H 69  10-3 Cm = 51  10-3 0.5 1.0 x/H

Turbulent Dissipation Rate: StH = 7.36 25 mm Cm = 51  10-3 Cm = 0 0.5 x/H -0.25 0.25 y/H Actuation leads to an order of magnitude increase in turbulent dissipation rate in the near field

Turbulent Dissipation Profiles StH = 7.36 0.3 -0.3 y/H x/H = 0.05 0.1 0.2 0.3 -0.3 y/H 0.3 0.4 0.5 104 5103 e* = eH2/(3nU02) 104 5103 e* = eH2/(3nU02) 104 5103 e* = eH2/(3nU02) Baseline flow: dissipation peak in the near-wall region. Controlled flow: much broader peak with an order of magnitude higher amplitude As the flow evolves, dissipation enhancement is reduced and becomes comparable to the unforced flow The controlled flow exhibits enhanced dissipation at shear layer edges

Experimental TKE Profiles –○– 0 –▲– 26 Cm103 x/H=0.1 x/H=0.25 x/H=0.5 EXPERIMENTS fd = 2000 Hz

Experimental and NPSE TKE Profiles –○– 0 –▲– 26 Cm103 x/H=0.1 x/H=0.25 x/H=0.5 EXPERIMENTS fd = 2000 Hz I II II x/H=0.25 x/H=0.50 x/H=0.75 fd = 300 Hz NPSE I I II I – small-scale structures dominate II – peak energy lowered and energy is broadened (thicker shear layer)

Regions of HF Influence EXPERIMENTAL momentum thickness EXPERIMENTAL cross-section integrated TKE –○– 0 –▲– 26 Cm103 III I II ANALYTICAL natural frequency Region I - actuation increases TKE Region II – actuation spreads TKE and reduces its peak in the thickened shear layer Region III - low frequency mode re-emerges

Cross-sectional Integrated TKE EXPERIMENTAL fd = 2000 Hz –○– 0 –▲– 26 Cm103 III I II I II III NPSE fd = 300 Hz

LI/q0 < x/θ0 < LII/q0 High-Frequency Control uncontrolled U0 ln controlled U0 high-frequency actuation Lre-em >> ln Stabilized Shear Layer Emergence of Inviscid Instability INCREASED DECREASED production, dissipation HF Domain I II III Li = func(Cm, fd) LI LII LIII 0 < x/θ0 < LI/q0 LI/q0 < x/θ0 < LII/q0 x/θ0 > LII/q0 Under HF actuation, three regions of shear layer are found

Conclusions Direct small-scale manipulation of the BFS shear layer is investigated experimentally and numerically. Continuous high-frequency actuation is effected by interaction of a small-scale vortex train with the shear layer. Stability analysis suggests that high-frequency actuation is characterized by fd > 2fn,max. High-frequency actuation modifies the base shear layer: Region I: much thicker shear layer and significantly lower natural frequencies increase in both TKE production and dissipation “stabilized” flow to fundamental instability Region II: thicker shear layer and lower natural frequencies suppressed peak of TKE and spread of energy in the thicker shear layer Region III: Energy of high-frequency actuation is dissipated No significant alteration of shear layer thickness and natural frequencies Re-emergence of inviscid instability, but at lower frequency and spatially delayed

Discussion: High-Frequency Excitation The possible mechanism: - high-frequency excitation of mode M modifies the mean flow through the zero mode changes - the modified mean flow interacts with the low frequency modes (ω1, ω2,…, 2ωn,max) to redistribute their energy and lower it M & conj(M)  0  0 & 1 + 0 & conj(1)  modified 1;  0 & 2 + 0 & conj(2)  modified 2; … - As the strength of mode M decreases along the shear layer its effect decreases and low-frequency modes reappear but at lower natural frequencies