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Effect of free-stream turbulence and other vortical disturbances on a laminar boundary layer
This paper is concerned with the effect of free-stream turbulence on the pretransitional flat-plate boundary layer. It is assumed that either the turbulent Reynolds number or the downstream distance (or both) is small enough that the flow can be linearized. The dominant disturbances in the boundary...
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Published in: | Journal of fluid mechanics 1999-02, Vol.380, p.169-203 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This paper is concerned with the effect of free-stream turbulence
on the pretransitional
flat-plate boundary layer. It is assumed that either the turbulent Reynolds
number or the downstream distance (or both) is small enough that the flow
can be linearized.
The dominant disturbances in the boundary layer, which are of the Klebanoff
type, are governed by the linearized unsteady boundary-region equations,
i.e. the
linearized Navier–Stokes equations with the streamwise derivatives
neglected in the
viscous and pressure-gradient terms. The turbulence is represented as a
superposition
of vortical free-stream Fourier modes and the corresponding Fourier component
solutions
to the boundary-region equations are obtained numerically. The results
are then
superposed to compute the root mean square of the fluctuating streamwise
velocity
in the boundary layer produced by the actual free-stream turbulence. It
is found that
the disturbances computed with isotropic free-stream turbulence do not
reach the
levels measured in experiments. However, good quantitative agreement is
obtained
with the relatively low turbulent Reynolds number data of Kendall when
the measured
strong anisotropy of the low-frequency portion of his spectrum is accounted
for. Data at higher turbulent Reynolds numbers are affected by nonlinearity,
which
manifests itself through the generation of small spanwise length scales.
We attempt
to model this within the context of the linear theory by choosing a free-stream
spectrum
whose energy is concentrated at larger transverse wavenumbers and achieve
very good agreement with the data. The results suggest that even small
deviations
from pure isotropy can be an important factor in explaining the large amplitudes
of the Klebanoff modes in the pre-transitional boundary layer, and also
point to
the importance of nonlinear effects. We discuss some additional effects
that may
need to be accounted for in order to obtain a complete description of the
Klebanoff
modes. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1120 1469-7645 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0022112098003504 |