IUTAM Symposium on Flow Control and MEMS


Book Description

The Symposium brought together many of the world’s experts in fluid mechanics, microfabrication and control theory to discover the synergy that can lead to real advances and perhaps find ways in which collaborative projects may proceed. The high profile meeting was attended by keynote speakers who are leaders in their fields. A key driver was the improvement in flow efficiency to reduce drag, and thereby emissions arising from transport. About 65 papers were presented.










Vortex/wall Interaction


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Self-sustaining Mechanisms of Wall Turbulence


Book Description

Why is wall turbulence self-sustaining? In this book well-regarded researchers not only discuss what they know and believe, but also speculate on ideas that still require numerical or experimental testing and verification. An initial brief history of boundary layer structure research is followed by chapters on experimental information and specific topics within the subject. There are then sections on computational aspects.







Annual Research Briefs ...


Book Description







Capitalizing on Convective Instabilities in a Streamwise Vortex-wall Interaction


Book Description

Abstract: Secondary flows in turbomachinery and similar engineering applications are often dominated by a single streamwise vortex structure. Investigations into the control of these flows using periodic forcing have shown a discrete range of forcing frequency where the vortex is particularly receptive. Forcing in this frequency range results in increased movement of the vortex and decreased total pressure losses. Based on the hypothesis that this occurs due to a linear instability associated with the Crow instability, a fundamental study of instabilities in streamwise vortex-wall interactions is performed. In the first part of this study a three-dimensional vortex-wall interaction is computed and analyzed for the presence of convective instabilities. It is shown that the Crow instability and a range of elliptic instabilities exist in a similar form as to what has been studied in counter-rotating vortex pairs. The Crow instability is particularly affected by the presence of a solid no-slip wall. Differences in the amplification rate, oscillation angle, Reynolds number sensitivity, and transient growth are each discussed. The spatial development of the vortex-wall interaction is shown to have a further stabilizing effect on the Crow instability due to a "lift-off" behavior. Despite these discoveries, it is still shown that amplitude growth on the order of 20% is possible and transient growth mechanisms might result in an order-of-magnitude of further growth if properly initiated. With these results in mind, an experiment is developed to isolate the streamwise vortex-wall interaction. Through the use of a vortex generating wing section and a suspended splitter plate, a stable interaction is created that agrees favorably in structure to the three-dimensional computations. A small synthetic jet actuator is mounted on the splitter plate below the vortex. Phase-locked stereo-PIV velocity data and surface pressure taps both show spatial amplification of the disturbance in a frequency range which agrees well with the prediction for the Crow instability. An analysis of the vortex response shows a primarily horizontal oscillation of the vortex column which strongly interacts with the secondary vortex structure that develops in the boundary layer.