Unsteady Surface Pressures Due to Wake-Induced Transition in a Laminar Separation Bubble on a Low-Pressure Cascade
Author:
Stieger R. D.1, Hollis David2, Hodson H. P.1
Affiliation:
1. Whittle Laboratory, Cambridge University, Engineering Department, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0DY, UK 2. Department of Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering, Loughborough University, Stewart Miller Building, Leics LE 11 3TU, UK
Abstract
This paper presents unsteady surface pressures measured on the suction surface of a LP turbine cascade that was subject to wake passing from a moving bar wake generator. The surface pressures measured under the laminar boundary layer upstream of the steady flow separation point were found to respond to the wake passing as expected from the kinematics of wake convection. In the region where a separation bubble formed in steady flow, the arrival of the convecting wake produced high frequency, short wavelength, fluctuations in the ensemble-averaged blade surface pressure. The peak-to-peak magnitude was 30% of the exit dynamic head. The existence of fluctuations in the ensemble averaged pressure traces indicates that they are deterministic and that they are produced by coherent structures. The onset of the pressure fluctuations was found to lie beneath the convecting wake and the fluctuations were found to convect along the blade surface at half of the local freestream velocity. Measurements performed with the boundary layer tripped ahead of the separation point showed no oscillations in the ensemble average pressure traces indicating that a separating boundary layer is necessary for the generation of the pressure fluctuations. The coherent structures responsible for the large-amplitude pressure fluctuations were identified using PIV to be vortices embedded in the boundary layer. It is proposed that these vortices form in the boundary layer as the wake passes over the inflexional velocity profiles of the separating boundary layer and that the rollup of the separated shear layer occurs by an inviscid Kelvin-Helmholtz mechanism.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Mechanical Engineering
Reference20 articles.
1. Halstead, D. E., Wisler, D. C., Okiishi, T. H., Walker, G. J., Hodson, H. P., and Shin, H.-W., 1997, “Boundary Layer Development in Axial Compressors and Turbines: Part I—Composite Picture,” ASME J. Turbomach., 119, pp. 114–127. 2. Halstead, D. E., Wisler, D. C., Okiishi, T. H., Walker, G. J., Hodson, H. P., and Shin, H.-W., 1997, “Boundary Layer Development in Axial Compressors and Turbines: Part II—Compressors,” ASME J. Turbomach., 119, pp. 114–127. 3. Halstead, D. E., Wisler, D. C., Okiishi, T. H., Walker, G. J., Hodson, H. P., and Shin, H.-W., 1997, “Boundary Layer Development in Axial Compressors and Turbines: Part III—LP Turbines,” ASME J. Turbomach., 119, pp. 114–127. 4. Halstead, D. E., Wisler, D. C., Okiishi, T. H., Walker, G. J., Hodson, H. P., and Shin, H.-W., 1997, “Boundary Layer Development in Axial Compressors and Turbines: Part IV—Computations and Analyses,” ASME J. Turbomach., 119, pp. 114–127. 5. Mayle, R. E. , 1991, “The Role of Laminar-Turbulent Transition in Gas Turbines Engines,” ASME J. Turbomach., 113, p. 509509.
Cited by
33 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|