Author:
NATHAN G. J.,HILL S. J.,LUXTON R. E.
Abstract
A continuously unstable precessing flow within a short cylindrical
chamber following
a large sudden expansion is described. The investigation relates to a nozzle
designed
to produce a jet which achieves large-scale mixing in the downstream field.
The inlet
flow in the plane of the sudden expansion is well defined and free from
asymmetry.
Qualitative flow visualization in water and semi-quantitative surface flow
visualization
in air are reported which identify this precession within the chamber.
Quantitative
simultaneous measurements from fast-response pressure transducers at four
tapping
points on the internal walls of the nozzle chamber confirm the presence
of the
precessing field. The investigation focuses on the flow within the nozzle
chamber
rather than that in the emerging jet, although the emerging flow is also
visualized.Two flow modes are identified: a ‘precessing jet’ mode which
is instantaneously
highly asymmetric, and a quasi-symmetric ‘axial jet’ mode.
The precessing jet mode,
on which the investigation concentrates, predominates in the geometric
configuration
investigated here. A topologically consistent flow field, derived from
the visualization
and from the fluctuating pressure data, which describes a three-dimensional
and
time-dependent precessing motion of the jet within the chamber is proposed.
The surface
flow visualization quantifies the axial distances to lines of positive
and negative
bifurcation allowing comparison with related flows involving large-scale
precession
or flapping reported by others. The Strouhal numbers (dimensionless frequencies)
of
these flows are shown to be two orders of magnitude lower than that measured
in the
shear layer of the jet entering the chamber. The phenomenon is demonstrated
to be
unrelated to acoustic coupling.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
92 articles.
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