Experimental study of second-mode instability growth and breakdown in a hypersonic boundary layer using high-speed schlieren visualization

2016 ◽  
Vol 797 ◽  
pp. 471-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. Laurence ◽  
A. Wagner ◽  
K. Hannemann

Visualization experiments are performed to investigate the development of instability waves within the boundary layer on a slender cone under high Mach number conditions. The experimental facility is a reflected-shock wind tunnel, allowing both low (Mach-8 flight equivalent) and high-enthalpy conditions to be simulated. Second-mode instability waves are visualized using a high-speed schlieren set-up, with pulse bursting of the light source allowing the propagation speed of the wavepackets to be unambiguously resolved. This, in combination with wavelength information derived from the images, enables the calculation of the disturbance frequencies. At the lower-enthalpy conditions, we concentrate on the late laminar and transitional regions of the flow. General characteristics are revealed through time-resolved and ensemble-averaged spectra on both smooth and porous ceramic surfaces of the cone. Analysis of the development of individual wavepackets is then performed. It is found that the wavepacket structures evolve from a ‘rope-like’ appearance to become more interwoven as the disturbance nears breakdown. The wall-normal disturbance distributions of both the fundamental and first harmonic, which initially have local maxima at the wall and near $y/{\it\delta}=0.7$–0.75, exhibit an increase in signal energy close to the boundary-layer edge during this evolution. The structure angle of the disturbances also undergoes subtle changes as the wavepacket develops prior to breakdown. Experiments are also performed at high-enthalpy ($h_{0}\approx 12~\text{MJ}~\text{kg}^{-1}$) conditions in the laminar regime, and the visualization technique is shown to be capable of resolving wavepacket propagation speeds and frequencies at such conditions. The visualizations reveal a somewhat different wall-normal distribution to the low-enthalpy case, with the disturbance energy concentrated much more towards the wall. This is attributed to the highly cooled nature of the wall at high enthalpy.

2016 ◽  
Vol 806 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Aleksandr N. Shiplyuk

The recent study of Laurence et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 797, 2016, pp. 471–503) develops a new Schlieren-based technique for investigating instabilities and transition in hypersonic boundary layers. This method enables pioneering measurements in a reflected-shock wind tunnel of the characteristics of the second mode of instability on a slender cone, within very short time scales (approximately 1 ms). The visualization technique was shown to resolve the structural evolution of individual wave packets. It was revealed that the disturbance strength concentrates near the wall for high-enthalpy conditions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 752 ◽  
pp. 349-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. D. Sandham ◽  
E. Schülein ◽  
A. Wagner ◽  
S. Willems ◽  
J. Steelant

AbstractStrong interactions of shock waves with boundary layers lead to flow separations and enhanced heat transfer rates. When the approaching boundary layer is hypersonic and transitional the problem is particularly challenging and more reliable data is required in order to assess changes in the flow and the surface heat transfer, and to develop simplified models. The present contribution compares results for transitional interactions on a flat plate at Mach 6 from three different experimental facilities using the same instrumented plate insert. The facilities consist of a Ludwieg tube (RWG), an open-jet wind tunnel (H2K) and a high-enthalpy free-piston-driven reflected shock tunnel (HEG). The experimental measurements include shadowgraph and infrared thermography as well as heat transfer and pressure sensors. Direct numerical simulations (DNS) are carried out to compare with selected experimental flow conditions. The combined approach allows an assessment of the effects of unit Reynolds number, disturbance amplitude, shock impingement location and wall cooling. Measures of intermittency are proposed based on wall heat flux, allowing the peak Stanton number in the reattachment regime to be mapped over a range of intermittency states of the approaching boundary layer, with higher overshoots found for transitional interactions compared with fully turbulent interactions. The transition process is found to develop from second (Mack) mode instabilities superimposed on streamwise streaks.


2009 ◽  
Vol 622 ◽  
pp. 33-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. HUMBLE ◽  
G. E. ELSINGA ◽  
F. SCARANO ◽  
B. W. van OUDHEUSDEN

An experimental study is carried out to investigate the three-dimensional instantaneous structure of an incident shock wave/turbulent boundary layer interaction at Mach 2.1 using tomographic particle image velocimetry. Large-scale coherent motions within the incoming boundary layer are observed, in the form of three-dimensional streamwise-elongated regions of relatively low- and high-speed fluid, similar to what has been reported in other supersonic boundary layers. Three-dimensional vortical structures are found to be associated with the low-speed regions, in a way that can be explained by the hairpin packet model. The instantaneous reflected shock wave pattern is observed to conform to the low- and high-speed regions as they enter the interaction, and its organization may be qualitatively decomposed into streamwise translation and spanwise rippling patterns, in agreement with what has been observed in direct numerical simulations. The results are used to construct a conceptual model of the three-dimensional unsteady flow organization of the interaction.


Author(s):  
Dennis Berridge ◽  
Katya Casper ◽  
Shann Rufer ◽  
Christopher Alba ◽  
Daniel Lewis ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Samee Maharjan ◽  
Dag Bjerketvedt ◽  
Ola Marius Lysaker

Abstract This paper presents a framework for processing high-speed videos recorded during gas experiments in a shock tube. The main objective is to study boundary layer interactions of reflected shock waves in an automated way, based on image processing. The shock wave propagation was recorded at a frame rate of 500,000 frames per second with a Kirana high-speed camera. Each high-speed video consists of 180 frames, with image size [$$768 \times 924$$ 768 × 924 ] pixels. An image processing framework was designed to track the wave front in each image and thereby estimate: (a) the shock position; (b) position of triple point; and (c) shock angle. The estimated shock position and shock angle were then used as input for calculating the pressure exerted by the shock. To validate our results, the calculated pressure was compared with recordings from pressure transducers. With the proposed framework, we were able to identify and study shock wave properties that occurred within less than $$300\, \upmu \hbox {sec}$$ 300 μ sec and to track evolveness over a distance of 100 mm. Our findings show that processing of high-speed videos can enrich, and give detailed insight, to the observations in the shock experiments.


2013 ◽  
Vol 722 ◽  
pp. 533-553 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. V. Fedorov ◽  
A. A. Ryzhov ◽  
V. G. Soudakov ◽  
S. V. Utyuzhnikov

AbstractTwo-dimensional direct numerical simulation (DNS) of the receptivity of a flat-plate boundary layer to temperature spottiness in the Mach 6 free stream is carried out. The influence of spottiness parameters on the receptivity process is studied. It is shown that the temperature spots propagating near the upper boundary-layer edge generate mode F inside the boundary layer. Further downstream mode F is synchronized with unstable mode S (Mack second mode) and excites the latter via the inter-modal exchange mechanism. Theoretical assessments of the mode F amplitude are made using the biorthogonal eigenfunction decomposition method. The DNS results agree with the theoretical predictions. If the temperature spots are initiated in the free stream and pass through the bow shock, the dominant receptivity mechanism is different. The spot–shock interaction leads to excitation of acoustic waves, which penetrate into the boundary layer and excite mode S. Numerical simulations show that this mechanism provides the instability amplitudes an order of magnitude higher than in the case of receptivity to the temperature spots themselves.


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