2,442 research outputs found

    Effect of acoustic excitation on stalled flows over an airfoil

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    The effect of acoustic excitation on post-stalled flows over an airfoil, i.e., flows that are fully separated from near the leading edge, is investigated. The excitation results in a tendency towards reattachment, which is accompanied by an increased lift and reduced drag, although the flow may still remain fully separated. It is found that with increasing excitation amplitude, the effect becomes more pronounced but shifts to a Strouhal number which is much lower than that expected from linear, inviscid instability of the separated shear layer

    Streamwise vorticity generation and mixing enhancement in free jets by delta-tabs

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    The effect of triangular tabs, placed at the nozzle exit, on the evolution of free jets is investigated. The effect, a large distortion of the jet cross section and a resultant increase in mixing downstream, has been inferred before to be due to a pair of streamwise vortices originating from each tab. In this paper, the generation mechanism of the stream wise vorticity (omega sub x) is considered first. Two sources are postulated. One is the upstream 'pressure hill', produced by the tab, which appears to be the dominant source. Another is due to vortex filaments shed from the sides of the tab and reoriented downstream by the mean shear of the mixing layer. In the case of a 'delta-tab', a triangular tab with its apex leaning downstream, vorticity from the two sources explain the stronger effect in that configuration. Data on the vorticity evolution for the effect of two delta-tabs are presented, up to twelve jet diameters from the exit, which show that the streamwise vortices persist even at the farthest measurement station. The magnitude of omega sub x-maximum decays continually with distance from the nozzle, its ratio to azimuthal vorticity maximum is found to be about 1/5 everywhere. The relative effect of a delta-tab on jets from an axisymmetric nozzle and a 8:1 rectangular nozzle is also studied. The mixing layer distortion is found to be less pronounced in the rectangular case. The jet mixing, as manifested by the mass flux measured at a downstream station, is increased in the axisymmetric jet but it is decreased in the rectangular jet under consideration by the delta-tab

    A steadying effect of acoustic excitation on transitory stall

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    The effect of acoustic excitation on a class of separated flows with a transitional boundary layer at the point of separation is considered. Experimental results on the flow over airfoils, a two-dimensional backward-facing step, and through large angle conical diffusers are presented. In all cases, the separated flow undergoes large amplitude fluctuations, much of the energy being concentrated at unusually low frequencies. In each case, an appropriate high frequency acoustic excitation is found to be effective in reducing the fluctuations substantially. The effective excitation frequency scales on the initial boundary layer thickness and the effect is apparently achieved through acoustic tripping of the separating boundary layer

    The low frequency oscillation in the flow over a NACA0012 airfoil with an iced leading edge

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    The unusually low frequency oscillation in the wake of an airfoil is explored experimentally as well as computationally for a NACA0012 airfoil with a glaze ice accretion at the leading edge. Experimentally, flow oscillations were observed at low frequencies that correspond to a Strouhal number of about 0.02. This occurred in the angle of attack range of 8 to 9 deg, near the onset of static stall for this airfoil. With a Navier-Stokes computation, limit-cycle oscillations in the flow and in the aerodynamic forces were also observed at low Strouhal numbers. However, the occurrence of the oscillation is found to depend on the turbulence model in use as well as the Reynolds number

    Viscous effects on the instability of an axisymmetric jet

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    The stability characteristics of a laminar, axisymmetric jet, issuing from fully developed Poiseuille flow, are investigated. The jet preferred frequency, as inferred from surveys of u'-spectra, is found to yield a Strouhal number (St) that depends on the Reynolds number (R); St and R are based on the jet diameter (D) and the average velocity (U sub av) at the jet origin. The value of St increases with increasing R in the range 400 less than approximately R less than approximately 4000, attaining an asymptotic value of about 0.45. Flow visualization confirms that the instability is primarily in a helical mode, as predicted by stability analyses. Analyses do predict a similar St versus R variation in approximately the correct St-range. However, the R-range where this is predicted is lower than that found experimentally

    Array trade-off study using multilayer parasitic subarrays

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    The use of multilayer parasitic patch arrays in a microstrip phased array offers many potential advantages. An analytical study of microstrip arrays with high gain multilayer parasitic patch subarrays and conventional patch antennas is presented. It is indicated that a thinned array of half as many multilayer parasitic patch subarrays (per row and column) at twice the spacing will perform as well as the full array of ordinary patch antennas. The criterion for comparison was array gain, 3 dB beamwidth and sidelobe level. The attendant reduction in the required number of patch antennas and consequently, MMIC phase shifters is very significant in terms of array complexity, cost and power loss

    Some Observations on Transitory Stall in Conical Diffusers

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    Results from an experimental investigation on the flow through conical diffusers are presented. The mean and fluctuating velocity fields are compared for three diffusers with total diffusion angles of 16, 20 and 24 degrees, in the throat Mach number (M sub t) range of 0.05 to 0.95. Each of the diffusers were 14 cm long and had a 5.08 cm inlet diameter, and the flow exited into the ambient. The boundary layer at the throat was thin with the throat diameter (D sub t) to momentum thickness (O) ratio being as high as 800 at M(sub t) = 0.4. While the 16 deg diffuser flow exited with a top-hat mean velocity profile, increasing losses due to increasing separation resulted in fuller profiles for the 20 and 24 degree cases. A detailed flow field study was conducted for the 16 deg. diffuser. The u'-spectrum, measured at the exit plane, exhibited a peak apparently due to the ensuing jet column instability throughout the M(sub t) range covered. In addition, a much lower frequency spectral peak also occurred in the M(sub t) range of 0.3 to 0.7. Both of the spectral peaks were due to axisymmetric flow fluctuations. A self-sustaining flow oscillation occurred in the M(sub t) range of 0.6 to 0.85, emitting a loud tone, when the jet column instability frequency matched the resonance frequency of the diffuser. Limited data showed that artificial acoustic excitation was effective in reducing the flow fluctuations, with a resultant increase in the pressure recovery, at low M(sub t)

    Control of laminar separation over airfoils by acoustic excitation

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    The effect of acoustic excitation in reducing laminar separation over two-dimensional airfoils at low angles of attack is investigated experimentally. Airfoils of two different cross sections, each with two different chord lengths, are studied in the chord Reynolds number range of 25,000 is less than R sub c is less than 100,000. While keeping the amplitude of the excitation induced velocity perturbation a constant, it is found that the most effective frequency scales as U (sup 3/2)(sub infinity). The parameter St/R (sup 1/2)(sub c), corresponding to the most effective f sub p for all the cases studied, falls in the range of 0.02 to 0.03, St being the Strouhal number based on the chord

    Effect of Initial Condition on Subsonic Jet Noise from Two Rectangular Nozzles

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    Differences in jet noise data from two small 8:1 aspect ratio nozzles are investigated experimentally. The interiors of the two nozzles are identical but one has a thin-lip at the exit while the has a perpendicular face at the exit (thick-lip). It is found that the thin-lip nozzle is substantially noisier throughout the subsonic Mach number range. As much as 5dB difference in OASPL is noticed around Mj =0.96. Hot-wire measurements are carried out for the characteristics of the exit boundary layer and, overall, the noise difference can be ascribed to differences in the boundary layer state. The boundary layer of the quieter (thick-lip) nozzle goes through transition around M(sub j) =0.25 and at higher M(sub j) it remains "nominally turbulent". In comparison, the boundary layer of the thin-lip nozzle is found to remain "nominally laminar". at high subsonic conditions. The nominally laminar state involves significantly larger turbulence intensities commensurate with the higher radiated noise

    Experimental study of boundary layer transition on a heated flat plate

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    A detailed investigation to the document momentum and thermal development of boundary layers undergoing natural transition on a heated flat plate was performed. Experimental results of both overall and conditionally sampled characteristics of laminar, transitional, and low Reynolds number turbulent boundary layers are presented. Measurements were done in a low-speed, closed-loop wind tunnel with a freestream velocity of 100 ft/s and zero pressure gradient over a range of freestream turbulence intensities from 0.4 to 6 percent. The distributions of skin friction, heat transfer rate, and Reynolds shear stress were all consistent with previously published data. Reynolds analogy factors for momentum thickness Reynolds number, Re(sub theta) less than 2300 were found to be well predicted by laminar and turbulent correlations which accounted for an unheated starting length and uniform heat flux. A small dependence of turbulence results on the freestream turbulence intensity was observed
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