167 research outputs found

    Universal scaling law in drag-to-thrust wake transition of flapping foils

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    Reversed von K\'arm\'an streets are responsible for a velocity surplus in the wake of flapping foils, indicating the onset of thrust generation. However, the wake pattern cannot be predicted based solely on the flapping peak-to-peak amplitude AA and frequency ff because the transition also depends sensitively on other details of the kinematics. In this work we replace AA with the cycle-averaged swept trajectory T\mathcal{T} of the foil chord-line. Two dimensional simulations are performed for pure heave, pure pitch and a variety of heave-to-pitch coupling. In a phase space of dimensionless Tāˆ’f\mathcal{T}-f we show that the drag-to-thrust wake transition of all tested modes occurs for a modified Strouhal StTāˆ¼1St_{\mathcal{T}}\sim 1. Physically the product Tā‹…f\mathcal{T}\cdot f expresses the induced velocity of the foil and indicates that propulsive jets occur when this velocity exceeds UāˆžU_{\infty}. The new metric offers a unique insight into the thrust producing strategies of biological swimmers and flyers alike as it directly connects the wake development to the chosen kinematics enabling a self similar characterisation of flapping foil propulsion.Comment: Rev

    Development of turbulent boundary layers past a step change in wall roughness

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    In this study, the development of a boundary layer past a change in surface roughness (from rough to smooth, R -> S) is examined. Measurements of the flow were made by hot wires, whereas the friction velocity was estimated by Preston tube measurements. By means of a diagnostic plot of the turbulence intensity, it is shown that above the internal layer the flow exhibits characteristics of a rough, wall-bounded flow, whereas near the wall the turbulence intensity is similar to that of an isolated smooth wall. Similarly, viscous scaling of the mean streamwise velocity shows an excessive wake region downstream of the R -> S wall surface change that diminishes with the fetch from the surface change. Above the internal layer a second peak in the streamwise Reynolds stress was associated with the upstream rough-wall flow. Examination of the turbulent spectra revealed the presence of large-scale motions within this region that gradually diminish in strength with increasing distance from the change in surface roughness. The magnitude of the near-wall peak failed to collapse to that of a comparable smooth-wall boundary layer under viscous scaling, however, the wall-normal location of the peak appears to be at y+?15 at all downstream distances. A new mixed scaling is proposed for the near-wall peak based on the corrected wake deficit and the friction velocity. This shows the importance of outer region to the growth of near-wall peak in this non-equilibrium boundary layer

    Towards decoupling the effects of permeability and roughness on turbulent boundary layers

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    Boundary layer flow over a realistic porous wall might contain both the effects of wall-permeability and wall-roughness. These two effects are typically examined in the context of a rough-wall flow, i.e., by defining a ``roughness'' length or equivalent to capture the effect of the surface on momentum deficit/drag. In this work, we examine the hypothesis of Esteban et al. (2022), that a turbulent boundary layer over a porous wall could be modelled as a superposition of the roughness effects on the permeability effects by using independently obtained information on permeability and roughness. We carry out wind tunnel experiments at high Reynolds number (14400ā‰¤ReĻ„ā‰¤3310014400 \leq Re_{\tau} \leq 33100) on various combinations of porous walls where different roughnesses are overlaid over a given permeable wall. Measurements are also conducted on the permeable wall as well as the rough walls independently to obtain the corresponding lengthscales. Analysis of mean flow data across all these measurements suggests that an empirical formulation can be obtained where the momentum deficit (Ī”U+\Delta U^+) is modelled as a combination of independently obtained roughness and permeability lengthscales. This formulation assumes the presence of outer-layer similarity across these different surfaces, which is shown to be valid at high Reynolds numbers. Finally, this decoupling approach is equivalent to the area-weighted power-mean of the respective permeability and roughness lengthscales, consistent with the approach recently suggested by Hutchins et al. (2023) to capture the effects of heterogeneous rough surfaces.Comment: Under review for publication in JFM Rapid

    Turbulent separation upstream of a forward-facing step

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    The turbulent flow over a forward-facing step is studied using two-dimensional time-resolved particle image velocimetry. The structure and behaviour of the separation region in front of the step is investigated using conditional averages based on the area of reverse flow present. The relation between the position of the upstream separation and the two-dimensional shape of the separation region is presented. It is shown that when of ā€˜closed' form, the separation region can become unstable resulting in the ejection of fluid over the corner of the step. The separation region is shown to grow simultaneously in both the wall-normal and streamwise directions, to a point where the maximum extent of the upstream position of separation is limited by the accompanying transfer of mass over the step corner. The conditional averages are traced backwards in time to identify the average behaviour of the boundary-layer displacement thickness leading up to such events. It is shown that these ejections are preceded by the convection of low-velocity regions from upstream, resulting in a three-dimensional interaction within the separation region. The size of the low-velocity regions, and the time scale at which the separation region fluctuates, is shown to be consistent with the large boundary layer structures observed in the literature. Instances of a highly suppressed separation region are accompanied by a steady increase in velocity in the upstream boundary laye

    Optimal mode decomposition for unsteady flows

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    A new method, herein referred to as optimal mode decomposition (OMD), of finding a linear model to describe the evolution of a fluid flow is presented. The method estimates the linear dynamics of a high-dimensional system which is first projected onto a subspace of a user-defined fixed rank. An iterative procedure is used to find the optimal combination of linear model and subspace that minimizes the system residual error. The OMD method is shown to be a generalization of dynamic mode decomposition (DMD), in which the subspace is not optimized but rather fixed to be the proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) modes. Furthermore, OMD is shown to provide an approximation to the Koopman modes and eigenvalues of the underlying system. A comparison between OMD and DMD is made using both a synthetic waveform and an experimental data set. The OMD technique is shown to have lower residual errors than DMD and is shown on a synthetic waveform to provide more accurate estimates of the system eigenvalues. This new method can be used with experimental and numerical data to calculate the ā€˜optimal' low-order model with a user-defined rank that best captures the system dynamics of unsteady and turbulent flow
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