Author:
ASAI MASAHITO,MINAGAWA MASAYUKI,NISHIOKA MICHIO
Abstract
The instability of the three-dimensional high-shear layer associated with a near-wall
low-speed streak is investigated experimentally. A single low-speed streak, not unlike
the near-wall low-speed streaks in transitional and turbulent flows, is produced in
a laminar boundary layer by using a small piece of screen set normal to the wall.
In order to excite symmetric and anti-symmetric modes separately, well-controlled
external disturbances are introduced into the laminar low-speed streak through small
holes drilled behind the screen. The growth of the excited symmetric varicose mode
is essentially governed by the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability of the in ectional velocity
profiles across the streak in the normal-to-wall direction and it can occur when the
streak width is larger than the shear-layer thickness. The spatial growth rate of
the symmetric mode is very sensitive to the streak width and is rapidly reduced as
the velocity defect decreases flowing to the momentum transfer by viscous stresses.
By contrast, the anti-symmetric sinuous mode that causes the streak meandering
is dominated by the wake-type instability of spanwise velocity distributions across
the streak. As far as the linear instability is concerned, the growth rate of the
anti-symmetric mode is not so strongly affected by the decrease in the streak width, and
its exponential growth may continue further downstream than that of the symmetric
mode. As for the mode competition, it is important to note that when the streak
width is narrow and comparable with the shear-layer thickness, the low-speed streak
becomes more unstable to the anti-symmetric modes than to the symmetric modes. It
is clearly demonstrated that the growth of the symmetric mode leads to the formation
of hairpin vortices with a pair of counter-rotating streamwise vortices, while the
anti-symmetric mode evolves into a train of quasi-streamwise vortices with vorticity
of alternate sign.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
164 articles.
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