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An investigation of the effects of spanwise wall oscillation on the structure of a turbulent boundary layer

Posted on:2000-09-23Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of Texas at AustinCandidate:Trujillo, Steven MathewFull Text:PDF
GTID:1460390014461064Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Transition of a fluid boundary layer from a laminar to a turbulent regime is accompanied by a large increase in skin friction drag. The ability to manipulate the flow or its bounding geometry to reduce this drag effectively has been a long-sought goal in contemporary fluid mechanics. Recently, workers have demonstrated that continuous lateral oscillation of the flow's bounding surface is one means to this goal, producing significant drag reduction.; The present study was performed to understand better the mechanism by which such a flow achieves drag reduction. An oscillating wall section was installed in a water channel facility, and the resulting flow was studied using laser Doppler velocimetry, hot-film anemometry, and visualization techniques. Traditional mean and fluctuating statistics were examined, as well as statistics computed from conditionally-sampled turbulent events. The dependence of these quantities on the phase of the oscillating surface's motion was also studied. Visualization-based studies were employed to provide insight into the structural changes brought on by the wall oscillation.; The most dramatic changes effected by the wall motion were seen as reductions in frequency of bursts and sweeps, events which concentrate large production of Reynolds stress and which ultimately augment wall skin friction. These Reynolds-stress reductions were reflected in reductions in mean and fluctuating quantifies in the lower regions of the boundary layer. Other velocity measurements confirmed earlier workers' speculations that the secondary flow induced by the oscillating wall is comparable to Stokes' solution for an oscillating plate in a quiescent fluid. Other than this secondary flow, however, the boundary layer displayed essentially no dependence on the phase of the wall motion. A simple cost analysis showed that, in general, the energy cost required to implement this technique is greater than the savings it produces.; The visualizations of the flow revealed a more uniform flow in the near-wall region resulting from wall oscillation. Quantitative analyses of the visualizations supported the velocity-based Reynolds-stress reductions; the same data also revealed that the quasi-streamwise vortical structures above the wall did not appear to be altered significantly by the wall motion.
Keywords/Search Tags:Wall, Boundary layer, Turbulent
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