Author:
DARMOFAL D. L.,KHAN R.,GREITZER E. M.,TAN C. S.
Abstract
Axisymmetric vortex core flows, in unconfined and confined geometries, are examined
using a quasi-one-dimensional analysis. The goal is to provide a simple unified view of
the topic which gives insight into the key physical features, and the overall parametric
dependence, of the core area evolution due to boundary geometry or far-field pressure
variation. The analysis yields conditions under which waves on vortex cores propagate
only downstream (supercritical flow) or both upstream and downstream (subcritical
flow), delineates the conditions for a Kelvin–Helmholtz instability arising from the
difference in core and outer flow axial velocities, and illustrates the basic mechanism
for suppression of this instability due to the presence of swirl. Analytic solutions
are derived for steady smoothly, varying vortex cores in unconfined geometries
with specified far-field pressure and in confined flows with specified bounding area
variation. For unconfined vortex cores, a maximum far-field pressure rise exists
above which the vortex cannot remain smoothly varying; this coincides with locally
critical conditions (axial velocity equal to wave speed) in terms of wave propagation.
Comparison with axisymmetric Navier–Stokes simulations and experimental results
indicate that this maximum correlates with the appearance of vortex breakdown
and marked core area increase in the simulations and experiments. For confined
flows, the core stagnation pressure defect relative to the outer flow is found to
be the dominant factor in determining conditions for large increases in core size.
Comparisons with axisymmetric Navier–Stokes computations show that the analysis
captures qualitatively, and in many instances, quantitatively, the evolution of vortex
cores in confined geometries. Finally, a strong analogy with quasi-one-dimensional
compressible flow is demonstrated by construction of continuous and discontinuous
flows as a function of imposed downstream core edge pressure.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
32 articles.
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