Author:
JACOBSON STUART A.,REYNOLDS WILLIAM C.
Abstract
Coherent structures play an important role in the dynamics of turbulent
shear flows.
The ability to control coherent structures could have significant technological
benefits
with respect to flow phenomena such as skin friction drag, transition,
mixing, and
separation. This paper describes the development of an actuator concept
that could
be used in large arrays for actively controlling transitional and turbulent
boundary
layers. The actuator consists of a piezoelectrically driven cantilever
mounted flush
with the flow wall. When driven, the resulting flow disturbance over the
actuator is
a quasi-steady pair of counter-rotating streamwise vortices with common-flow
away
from the wall. The vortices decay rapidly downstream of the actuator; however,
they
produce a set of high- and low-speed streaks that persist far downstream
(well over
40 displacement thicknesses). The amplitude of the actuator drive signal
controls the
strength of the generated vortices. The actuator is fast, compact, and
generates a
substantial disturbance in the flow. Its performance has been demonstrated
using a
small array of sensors and actuators in low-speed water laminar boundary
layers
with imposed steady and unsteady disturbances. Experiments are reported
in which
transition from a large disturbance was delayed by 40 displacement thicknesses,
and
in which the mean and spanwise variation of wall shear under an array of
high- and
low-speed streaks was substantially reduced downstream of a single transverse
array
of actuators.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
125 articles.
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