Abstract
This paper details experiments in the region where an impulsively started moving wall slides under a stationary wall. The experiments were conducted over a Reynolds number range of ReΓ=5×102–5×105. The length scale for the Reynolds number is defined as the distance the wall has moved from rest and increases during an experiment. Experiments show that for ReΓ>103 a vortex forms close to the junction where the moving wall meets the stationary one. The data shows that while the vortical structure is small, in relation to the fixed-apparatus length scale, the size of the vortex normalized with respect to the wall speed and viscosity scales in a universal fashion with respect to ReΓ. The scaling rate is proportional to t5/6 when the Reynolds number is large. The kinematic behaviour of the vortex is related to the impulse that the moving wall applies to the fluid and results in a prediction that the transient structure should grow as t5/6 and the velocity field should scale as t−1/6. The spatial-growth prediction is in good agreement with the experimental results and the velocity scaling is moderately successful in collapsing the experimental data.For ReΓ>2×104 three-dimensional instabilities appear on the perimeter of the vortical structure and the flow transitions from an unsteady two-dimensional flow to a strongly three-dimensional vortical structure at ReΓ≃ 4 × 104. The instability mechanism is centrifugal. The formation and growth of these instability structures and their ingestion into the primary vortex core causes the three-dimensional breakdown of the primary vortex. Two movies are available with the online version of the paper.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
21 articles.
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