Author:
COOPER A. J.,CARPENTER PETER W.
Abstract
A numerical study has been undertaken of the influence of a
compliant boundary on
absolute instability. In a certain parameter range absolute instability
occurs in the boundary layer on a rotating disc, thereby instigating rapid
transition to turbulence.
The conventional use of wall compliance as a laminar-flow control technique
has
been to lower growth rates of convective instabilities. This has the
effect of reducing amplification of disturbances as they propagate downstream.
For
absolute instability,
however, only the suppression of its onset would be a significant gain.
This paper
addresses the question of whether passive wall compliance can be advantageous
when
absolute instability exists in a boundary layer.A theoretical model of a single-layer viscoelastic compliant wall was
used in
conjunction with the sixth-order system of differential equations which
govern the
stability of the boundary-layer flow over a rotating disc.
The absolute/convective
nature of the flow was ascertained by using a spatio-temporal analysis.
Pinch-point
singularities of the dispersion relation and a point of zero group velocity
identify
the presence of absolute instability. It was found that only a low level
of wall
compliance was enough to delay the appearance of absolute instability to
higher
Reynolds numbers. Beyond a critical level of wall compliance results suggest
that
complete suppression of absolute instability is possible. This would then
remove a
major route to transition in the rotating-disc boundary layer.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
42 articles.
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