Abstract
We consider the reflection of oblique compression waves from a two-dimensional,
steady, laminar boundary layer on a flat, adiabatic plate at free-stream pressures
such that dense-gas effects are non-negligible. The full Navier–Stokes equations are
solved through use of a dense-gas version of the Beam–Warming implicit scheme. The
main fluids studied are Bethe–Zel'dovich–Thompson (BZT) fluids. These are ordinary
gases which have specific heats large enough to cause the fundamental derivative of
gasdynamics to be negative for a range of pressures and temperatures in the single-phase vapour regime. It is demonstrated that the unique dynamics of BZT fluids
can result in a suppression of shock-induced separation. Numerical tests performed
reveal that the physical mechanism leading to this suppression is directly related to
the disintegration of any compression discontinuities originating in the flow. We also
demonstrate numerically that the interaction of expansion shocks with the boundary
layer produces no adverse effects.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
24 articles.
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