scholarly journals Stabilization of a hypersonic boundary layer using a felt-metal porous coating

2015 ◽  
Vol 769 ◽  
pp. 729-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Tritarelli ◽  
S. K. Lele ◽  
A. Fedorov

An error in the complex representation of the porous-coating model used in the study by Fedorov et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 479, 2003, pp. 99–124), investigating the stabilization effect of ultrasonically absorptive coatings on hypersonic boundary layers, is pointed out and corrected. This error has been acknowledged by Fedorov et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 769, 2015, pp. 725–728). The corrected version of the erroneous linear stability results of the original work is presented and previously made conclusions are reassessed. The novel numerical results indicate that second-mode instabilities are shifted to lower frequencies on felt-metal porous coatings, similar to the behaviour observed on porous coatings with regular microstructure.

2013 ◽  
Vol 726 ◽  
pp. 312-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume A. Brès ◽  
Matthew Inkman ◽  
Tim Colonius ◽  
Alexander V. Fedorov

AbstractNumerical simulations of the linear and nonlinear two-dimensional Navier–Stokes equations, and linear stability theory are used to parametrically investigate hypersonic boundary layers over ultrasonic absorptive coatings. The porous coatings consist of a uniform array of rectangular pores (slots) with a range of porosities and pore aspect ratios. For the numerical simulations, temporally (rather than spatially) evolving boundary layers are considered and we provide evidence that this approximation is appropriate for slowly growing second-mode instabilities. We consider coatings operating in the typical regime where the pores are relatively deep and acoustic waves and second-mode instabilities are attenuated by viscous effects inside the pores, as well as regimes with phase cancellation or reinforcement associated with reflection of acoustic waves from the bottom of the pores. These conditions are defined as attenuative and cancellation/reinforcement regimes, respectively. The focus of the present study is on the cases which have not been systematically studied in the past, namely the reinforcement regime (which represents a worst-case scenario, i.e. minimal second-mode damping) and the cancellation regime (which corresponds to the configuration with the most potential improvement). For all but one of the cases considered, the linear simulations show good agreement with the results of linear instability theory that employs an approximate porous-wall boundary condition, and confirm that the porous coating stabilizing performance is directly related to their acoustic scattering performance. A particular case with relatively shallow pores and very high porosity showed the existence of a shorter-wavelength instability that was not initially predicted by theory. Our analysis shows that this new mode is associated with acoustic resonances in the pores and can be more unstable than the second mode. Modifications to the theoretical model are suggested to account for the new mode and to provide estimates of the porous coating parameters that avoid this detrimental instability. Finally, nonlinear simulations confirm the conclusions of the linear analysis; in particular, we did not observe any tripping of the boundary layer by small-scale disturbances associated with individual pores.


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