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1.
平板边界层中Tollmien-Schlichting波的共振干涉   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
本文采用频率分析法对Tollmien Schlichting波(T.-s.波)的共振干涉现象进行实验研究。结果表明,在不稳定的层流边界层的临界层附近测得的功率谱中,T.-s.波的能量集中在一个较窄的频段,其中有一至三个峰值分别对应于中性曲线内侧的T.-s.波的特征频率和最大增长率频率。T.-s.波的共振干涉将各特征分量的能量在它们的亚谐波分量通过中性曲线下支到达最大增长率点的相应R_8范围内传给它们的亚谐频,非特征频率的分量则迅速衰减,共振干涉的多次重复,使边界层逐步湍流化。  相似文献   

2.
In this work, we study the dispersion of elastic waves in piezoelectric infinite plates with ferroelectric inversion layers. The motivation is to analyze the effect of ferroelectric inversion layers on wave dispersion and resonant behavior under impulsive line loads. A semi-analytical finite-element (SAFE) method has been adopted to analyze the problem. Two model problems are considered for analysis. In one, the plate is composed of a layer of 36° rotated y-cut LiNbO3 with a ferroelectric inversion layer. In the other, material is PZT-4 with a ferroelectric inversion layer. Comparison with experimental results, reported in the literature for isotropic materials, shows a very good agreement with theoretical predictions obtained using SAFE method. Furthermore, comparison of the resonance frequencies of the S1 modes, calculated using KLM approximation (f0 = Cd/2h) and SAFE method, are illustrated for each problem. The frequency spectra of the surface displacements show that resonant peaks occur at frequencies where the group velocity vanishes and the phase velocity remains finite, i.e., a minimum in the dispersion curve below the cut-off frequency. The effect of the ratio of the thicknesses of the inversion layer (IL) and the plate on the frequencies and strength of the resonant peaks is examined. It is observed that for PZT-4 with 50% IL to plate thickness ratio the frequency for the second resonant peak is about twice that for the first one. Results are presented showing the dependence of resonant frequencies on the material properties and anisotropy. Materials selection for single-element harmonic ultrasound transducers is a very important factor for optimum design of transducers with multiple thickness-mode resonant frequencies. The theoretical analysis presented in this study should provide a means for optimum ultrasound transducer design for harmonic imaging in medical applications.  相似文献   

3.
Experimental results on the instability of the isothermal naturalconvection boundary layer around a vertical heated flat plate are presented. It is demonstrated that the characteristics of the instability wave in the outer layer is consistent with the calculation of Brewster & Gebhart. After an initial growth of its low frequency components at the downstream side of the turning point of the neutral curve (Gr≈120) its comparatively higher frequency components develop and become turbulent subsequently with a buoyancy subrange in its power spectra. Simultaneously, in the measurement at the inner layer near the wall a viscous instability signal the same as the Tollmien-Schlichting waves in ordinary boundary layer and its subharmonics in a much higher frequency domain is discovered and an inertial subrange can be observed in the spectra atGr≈378.6. The project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (19572004)  相似文献   

4.
An efficient hybrid uncorrelated wall plane waves–boundary element method (UWPW-BEM) technique is proposed to predict the flow-induced noise from a structure in low Mach number turbulent flow. Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations are used to estimate the turbulent boundary layer parameters such as convective velocity, boundary layer thickness, and wall shear stress over the surface of the structure. The spectrum of the wall pressure fluctuations is evaluated from the turbulent boundary layer parameters and by using semi-empirical models from literature. The wall pressure field underneath the turbulent boundary layer is synthesized by realizations of uncorrelated wall plane waves (UWPW). An acoustic BEM solver is then employed to compute the acoustic pressure scattered by the structure from the synthesized wall pressure field. Finally, the acoustic response of the structure in turbulent flow is obtained as an ensemble average of the acoustic pressures due to all realizations of uncorrelated plane waves. To demonstrate the hybrid UWPW-BEM approach, the self-noise generated by a flat plate in turbulent flow with Reynolds number based on chord Rec = 4.9 × 105 is predicted. The results are compared with those obtained from a large eddy simulation (LES)-BEM technique as well as with experimental data from literature.  相似文献   

5.
In the present experimental setup, the transient disturbance growth in a spatially invariant boundary layer flow, i.e., the asymptotic suction boundary layer (ASBL), has been investigated. The choice of the ASBL brings along several advantages compared with an ordinary spatially growing boundary layer. A unique feature of the ASBL is that the Reynolds number (Re) can be varied without changing the boundary layer thickness, which in turn allows for parameter variations not possible to carry out in traditional boundary layer flows. A spanwise array of discrete surface roughness elements was mounted on the surface to trigger modes with different spanwise wavenumbers (β). It is concluded that for each mode there exists a threshold roughness Reynolds number (Re k ), below which no significant transient growth is present. The experimental data suggests that this threshold Re k is both a function of β and Re. An interesting result is that the energy growth curves respond differently to a change in Re k when caused by a change in roughness height k, implying that Re remains constant, compared with a change in the free-stream velocity UU_\infty, which also affects the Re. The scaling of the energy growth curves both in level and the downstream direction is treated and appropriate scalings are found. The result shows a complex non-linear receptivity mechanism. Optimal perturbation theory, which has failed to predict the energy evolution in growing boundary layers, is tested for the ASBL and shows that it may satisfactorily predict the evolution of all transiently growing modes that are triggered by the roughness elements.  相似文献   

6.
A theoretical analysis is described that determines the conditions for Helmholtz resonance for a popular class of self-contained microjet actuator used in both synthetic- and pressure-jump (pulse-jet) mode. It was previously shown that the conditions for Helmholtz resonance are identical to those for optimizing actuator performance for maximum mass flux. The methodology is described for numerical-simulation studies on how Helmholtz resonance affects the interaction of active and nominally inactive micro-jet actuators with a laminar boundary layer. Two sets of numerical simulations were carried out. The first set models the interaction of an active actuator with the boundary layer. These simulations confirm that our criterion for Helmholtz resonance is broadly correct. When it is satisfied we find that the actuator cannot be treated as a predetermined wall boundary condition because the interaction with the boundary layer changes the pressure difference across the exit orifice thereby affecting the outflow from the actuator. We further show that strong inflow cannot be avoided even when the actuator is used in pressure-jump mode. In the second set of simulations two-dimensional Tollmien–Schlichting waves, with frequency comparable with, but not particularly close to, the Helmholtz resonant frequency, are incident on a nominally inactive micro-jet actuator. The simulations show that under these circumstances the actuators act as strong sources of 3D Tollmien–Schlichting waves. It is surmised that in the real-life aeronautical applications with turbulent boundary layers broadband disturbances of the pressure field, including acoustic waves, would cause nominally inactive actuators, possibly including pulsed jets, to act as strong disturbance sources. Should this be true it would probably be disastrous for engineering applications of such massless microjet actuators for flow control.  相似文献   

7.
Within the framework of the weakly nonlinear stability theory, group interaction of disturbances in a supersonic boundary layer is considered. The disturbances are represented by two spatial packets of traveling instability waves (wave trains) with multiple frequencies. The possibility of energy redistribution in such wave systems in the case of three-wave resonant interactions of packet constituents is considered. The model is used to test the dynamics of unstable waves arising due to introduction of controlled high-intensity disturbances into a supersonic boundary layer. It is found that this mechanism is not the main one for the features of streamwise dynamics of such nonlinear waves being observed.  相似文献   

8.
Effect of surface steps on boundary layer transition   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An experimental study has been carried out to examine the effect of a sharp-edged step on boundary layer transition. The transition position and disturbance spectra in the boundary layer for different step heights and free-stream velocities were measured by hot-wire anemometry. A correlation between the transition Reynolds number and the relative step height has been established for both backward-facing and forward-facing steps. The transition position is associated with the “N-factor” that defines the integrated growth of instability waves at transition. The boundary layer over a step has an earlier transition position than that on a smooth plate, since the instability waves amplify more rapidly than those on a smooth surface. The transition N-factor for the flow containing a step, calculated using the amplification rates on a smooth plate, will, therefore, be smaller than that on surfaces without a step. The observed reduction of the N-factor occurring with a step has been shown to correlate with the height of the step, thus, providing an empirical tool that can be used to estimate the transition position when steps occur. An appropriate value of N can be determined from knowledge of the step height.  相似文献   

9.
We investigate spatial resolution issues in hot-wire anemometry measurements of turbulence intensity and energy spectra. Single normal hot-wire measurements are simulated by means of filtering direct numerical simulation (DNS) of turbulent channel flow at Ret = 934Re_\tau = 934. Through analysis of the two-dimensional energy spectra from the DNS, the attenuation of the small-scale energy levels is documented, especially in the near-wall region. The missing energy displays anisotropic characteristics, and an attempt is made to model this using an empirical equation, thus providing a correction scheme for all wall normal locations. The empirical model is assessed using experimental boundary layer data and shown to effectively correct both the streamwise one-dimensional energy spectra and turbulence intensity at a Reynolds number significantly above that of the DNS.  相似文献   

10.
The evolution of disturbances in a hypersonic viscous shock layer on a flat plate excited by slow-mode acoustic waves is considered numerically and experimentally. The parameters measured in the experiments performed with a free-stream Mach number M = 21 and Reynolds number Re L = 1.44 · 105 are the transverse profiles of the mean density and Mach number, the spectra of density fluctuations, and growth rates of natural disturbances. Direct numerical simulation of propagation of disturbances is performed by solving the Navier-Stokes equations with a high-order shock-capturing scheme. The numerical and experimental data characterizing the mean flow field, intensity of density fluctuations, and their growth rates are found to be in good agreement. Possible mechanisms of disturbance generation and evolution in the shock layer at hypersonic velocities are discussed. __________ Translated from Prikladnaya Mekhanika i Tekhnicheskaya Fizika, Vol. 47, No. 5, pp. 3–15, September–October, 2006.  相似文献   

11.
Auto-correlation, time and length scales of the three components of turbulence and power spectra in a three-dimensional turbulent boundary layer developing on a yawed flat plate have been obtained. The measurements indicate that close to the wall, in the region of turbulence production, there is a marked disparity among the time scales but as the outer edge of the boundary layer is approached, the scales become comparable to one another. Also, the behaviour of the length scales and the power spectra across the boundary layer is presented.Nomenclature Boundary layer thickness where Q/Q e=0.995 - E u(f) one dimensional frequency spectra - f frequency in Hz - k 1 wave number defined as k 1=2f/Q - L length scale defined as: time scale times local mean velocity - Q local mean velocity - Q e free stream velocity - R u, R v, R w Auto-correlation coefficients of u, v and w respectively as defined in equation (1) - T u, T v, T w the time scales of u, v and w fluctuations as defined in equation (2) - delay time - u fluctuating velocity component in x-direction - v fluctuation velocity component in y-direction - w fluctuation velocity component in z-direction - x coordinate axis in the streamwise direction - y coordinate axis normal to the surface - z coordinate axis normal to the x-direction and parallel to the wall  相似文献   

12.
The article describes a method for calculating the flow of heat through a wavy boundary separating a layer of liquid from a layer of gas, under the assumption that the viscosity and heat-transfer coefficients are constant, and that a constant temperature of the fixed wall and a constant temperature of the gas flow are given. A study is made of the equations of motion and thermal conductivity (without taking the dissipation energy into account) in the approximations of the theory of the boundary layer; the left-hand sides of these equations are replaced by their averaged values over the layer. These equations, after linearization, are used to determine the velocity and temperature distributions. The qualitative aspect of heat transfer in a thin layer of viscous liquid, under regular-wavy flow conditions, is examined. Particular attention is paid to the effect of the surface tension coefficient on the flow of heat through the interface.Notation x, y coordinates of a liquid particle - t time - v and u coordinates of the velocity vector of the liquid - p pressure in the liquid - cv, , T,, andv heat capacity, thermal conductivity coefficient, temperature, density, and viscosity of the liquid, respectively - g acceleration due to gravity - surface-tension coefficient - c phase velocity of the waves at the interface - Tw wall temperature - h0 thickness of the liquid layer - u0 velocity of the liquid over the layer Translated from Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No. 4, pp. 147–151, July–August, 1970.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of upstream injection by means of continuous air jet vortex generators (AJVGs) on a shock wave turbulent boundary layer interaction is experimentally investigated. The baseline interaction is of the impinging type, with a flow deflection angle of 9.5° and a Mach number M e  = 2.3. Considered are the effects of the AJVGs on the upstream boundary layer flow topology and on the spatial and dynamical characteristics of the interaction. To this aim, Stereoscopic Particle Image Velocimetry has been employed, in addition to hot-wire anemometry (HWA) for the investigation of the unsteady characteristics of the reflected shock. The AJVGs cause a reduction of the separation bubble length and height. In addition, the energetic frequency range of the reflected shock is increased by approximately 50%, which is in qualitative agreement with the smaller separation bubble size.  相似文献   

14.
The nonlinear interaction of waves in a fluid of finite depth is discussed. Forbidden decay processes in the gravitational portion of the spectrum are eliminated from the Hamiltonian by means of a canonical transformation. This provides an opportunity to obtain a kinetic equation which takes into account scattering of capillary waves by gravitational waves, in addition to decays in the subsystem of gravitational waves. The distribution Nk P1/2h1/4k–4 is obtained for capillary waves in shallow water with constant flow of energy P with respect to the spectrum in the space of the wave numbers k. The interaction of the gravitational and capillary turbulence spectra is discussed. An induced distribution of gravitational waves is found which results from their interaction with capillary waves. It is an increasing function of the wave numbers q in the region bounded by the capillary constant ko, Nq q9/4 (q < ko). The coupling of spectra in the gravitational and capillary regions and the conversion from slightly turbulent distributions to universal distributions are discussed.Translated from Zhurnal Prikladnoi Mekhaniki i Tekhnicheskoi Fiziki, No. 6, pp. 97–106, November–December, 1974.  相似文献   

15.
This is the second paper in a group of three that reports the systematic measurements of wind-generated water waves in a wind tunnel experiment. Here, the structure of the boundary layer on the air side of the water?Cair interface was analysed and compared with the boundary layer over a smooth plane rigid wall. The contribution of the wave-induced Reynolds stress was detected through filtering the spectrum of velocity fluctuations. Wave-induced Reynolds stresses became negligible for z?>?5 H rms. The intermittency factor in the boundary layer over water waves was similar to that in a boundary layer over a rigid plane wall, with several differences near the interface. Here, the presence/absence of water damps out the turbulence. The quadrant analyses revealed that ejection and sweep events were dominant and more concentrated. At small fetches, the large-amplitude negative streamwise perturbations were preferentially lifted. Turbulence energy production peaked at z/???=?0.2 and had a distribution similar to that observed for a self-preserving boundary layer with a strong adverse gradient pressure. The quadrant analysis contribution to the energy production revealed that ejections still dominated the balance and that the production was spatially modulated in the wind direction with a couple of cells and with a minimum in the area of the free surface wave height reduction.  相似文献   

16.
In the present paper we study the effect of rigid boundary on the propagation of torsional waves in a homogeneous layer over a semi-infinite heterogeneous half-space, where the heterogeneity is both in rigidity and density. The present study demonstrates that torsional waves can propagate in the layer. The velocities of torsional waves have been calculated numerically as a functions of KH, (where K is the wave number and H is the thickness of the layer) and are presented in a number of graphs. It is also observed that, for a layer over a homogeneous half-space, the velocity of torsional waves does not coincide with that of Love waves in the presence of the rigid boundary whereas it does at the free boundary.  相似文献   

17.
This investigation focuses on defining the lock-on regions of a cavity shear layer subject to local periodic excitations. A circular cylinder of small diameter (d=4 mm), located very close to the upstream edge of cavity, is used to generate the local periodic excitations in the form of oscillatory rotation about its center with various angular amplitudes (Δθ) and frequencies (fe). All the experiments were conducted in a recirculating water channel at three different Reynolds numbers that are based on the momentum thickness at the upstream edge of cavity (Reθ0=152, 216 and 278). The LDV system and the laser-sheet technique are employed to perform the quantitative velocity measurements and the qualitative flow visualization, respectively. For cavity flows at three Reynolds numbers studied, the resonant lock-on is found to be the primary lock-on region within the range of frequency ratio (fe/f0=0.28–2.0). Here f0 denotes the natural instability frequency of an unexcited cavity shear layer. The frequency bandwidth of resonant lock-on region does increase with increasing excitation amplitudes (Δθ). While the excitation amplitudes are smaller than 5° (Δθ5°), the resonant lock-on region, at Reynolds numbers 216 and 278, distributes asymmetrically about fe/f0=1.0 and biases to the high frequency (or large fe/f0) side. However, the sidewise expansion of resonant lock-on region is enlarged and the degree of asymmetric distribution is alleviated at large excitation amplitudes (Δθ>5°). The amount of sidewise expansion of the resonant lock-on region biased toward the high-frequency side is more significant at the lowest Reynolds number (152) than those at two higher Reynolds numbers (216 and 278). Besides, there exists a sub-harmonic lock-on region only at the lowest Reynolds number 152. The existence of a sub-harmonic lock-on region clearly reveals that the differential equation governing the self-excited oscillation within a cavity contains the quadratic nonlinear term. Further, at the lowest Reynolds number (152), the sidewise expansion of the sub-harmonic lock-on region is much narrower than that of the resonant lock-on region.  相似文献   

18.
The structure of the velocity field above a propagating water wave of fixed frequency was investigated in order to evaluate the transport of wind momentum to water waves and the influence of a mobile and deformable boundary on the bursting cycle. The vertical and horizontal velocities were measured in a transformed Eulerian wave-following frame of reference with the aid of a cross hot film, in a wind-wave research facility at Stanford University.The mean velocity profiles have a log-linear form with a wake free-stream characteristic. The wave-coherent motion in the free-stream is irrotational; in the boundary layer, it has a strong shear behavior related to the wave-associated stress. The wave-induced velocity field and the wave-perturbed turbulence depend strongly on the ratio of the wave-speed to the mean free-stream velocity, c/U 0.The presence of the propagating waves affects the bursting cycle, making the contribution of sweeps and ejections almost equal and dependent on the ratio c/U 0. The magnitudes of the contribution of the bursting events are generally enhanced by the presence of water waves. The time interval between ejections or sweeps does not scale with either the inner and/or outer flow variables.This paper was presented at the Ninth Symposium on Turbulence, University of Missouri-Rolla, October 1–3, 1984  相似文献   

19.
Effect of local forcing on a turbulent boundary layer   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
An experimental study is performed to analyze flow structures behind local suction and blowing in a flat-plate turbulent boundary layer. The local forcing is given to the boundary layer flow by means of a sinusoidally oscillating jet issuing from a thin spanwise slot at the wall. The Reynolds number based on the momentum thickness is about Re θ =1700. The effects of local forcing are scrutinized by altering the forcing frequency (0.011 ≤ f+≤ 0.044). The forcing amplitude is fixed at A 0=0.4. It is found that a small local forcing reduces the skin friction and the skin friction reduction increases with the forcing frequency. A phase-averaging technique is employed to capture the large-scale vortex evolution. An organized spanwise vortical structure is generated by the local forcing. The cross-sectional area of vortex and the time fraction of vortex are examined by changing the forcing frequency. An investigation of the random fluctuation components reveals that turbulent energy is concentrated near the center of vortical structures. Received: 17 March 2000/Accepted: 3 April 2001  相似文献   

20.
Laminar boundary layer separation, shear layer transition and reattachment have been experimentally investigated on a flat plate installed within a double contoured test section designed to produce an adverse pressure gradient typical of Ultra-High-Lift turbine profiles. Measurements have been performed for the Reynolds number range 70,000 < Re < 200,000, typical of real engine operation. Profile aerodynamic loadings as well as boundary layer velocity profiles have been measured to survey the separation and transition processes. Particle Image Velocimetry measurements allowed the visualization of vortical structures induced by the shear layer instability. Spectral analysis of hot-wire velocity data has been adopted to identify the characteristic frequencies of the phenomena. Distinct energy peaks, associated with the Kelvin–Helmholtz waves generated in the shear layer over the separation bubble, appear in the spectra. In particular the evolution along the shear layer of the energy contents at the characteristic frequencies of the phenomenon has been analyzed. Two frequency ranges have been identified in which the instability waves are amplified within the shear layer over the stagnation area. The inviscid Kelvin–Helmholtz instability is the main mechanism that drives transition, but it starts to be relevant only after that lower frequency oscillations are amplified and reach the saturation.  相似文献   

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