Abstract
This paper contains the details of an experimental study of the vortex formed in front
of a piston as it moves through a cylinder. The mechanism for the formation of this
vortex is the removal of the boundary layer forming on the cylinder wall in front of
the advancing piston. The trajectory of the vortex core and the vorticity distribution
on the developing vortex have been measured for a range of piston velocities. Velocity
field measurements indicate that the vortex is essentially an inviscid structure at the
Reynolds numbers considered, with viscous effects limited to the immediate corner
region. Inviscid flow is defined in this paper as being a region of the flow where
inertial forces are significantly larger than viscous forces. Flow visualization and
vorticity measurements show that the vortex is composed mainly of material from
the boundary layer forming over the cylinder wall. The characteristic dimension of
the vortex appears to scale in a self-similar fashion, while it is small in relation to
the apparatus length scale. This scaling rate of t0.85+0.7m, where the piston speed is
described as a power law Atm, is somewhat
faster than the t3/4 scaling predicted
by Tabaczynski et al. (1970) and considerably faster than a viscous scaling rate of
t1/2. The reason for the structure scaling more rapidly than predicted is the self-induced effect of the secondary vorticity that is generated on the piston face. The
vorticity distribution shows a distinct spiral structure that is smoothed by the action
of viscosity. The strength of the separated vortex also appears to scale in a self-similar
fashion as t2m+1. This rate is the same as suggested from a simple model of the flow
that approximates the vorticity being ejected from the corner as being equivalent
to the flux of vorticity over a flat plate started from rest. However, the strength
of the vorticity on the separated structure is 25% of that suggested by this model,
sometimes referred to as the ‘slug’ model. Results show that significant secondary
vorticity is generated on the piston face, forming in response to the separating primary
vortex. This secondary vorticity grows at the same rate as the primary vorticity and
is wrapped around the outside of the primary structure and causes it to advect away
from the piston surface.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
19 articles.
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