Secondary instability of crossflow vortices and swept-wing boundary-layer transition

1999 ◽  
Vol 399 ◽  
pp. 85-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
MUJEEB R. MALIK ◽  
FEI LI ◽  
MEELAN M. CHOUDHARI ◽  
CHAU-LYAN CHANG

Crossflow instability of a three-dimensional boundary layer is a common cause of transition in swept-wing flows. The boundary-layer flow modified by the presence of finite-amplitude crossflow modes is susceptible to high-frequency secondary instabilities, which are believed to harbinger the onset of transition. The role of secondary instability in transition prediction is theoretically examined for the recent swept-wing experimental data by Reibert et al. (1996). Exploiting the experimental observation that the underlying three-dimensional boundary layer is convectively unstable, non-linear parabolized stability equations are used to compute a new basic state for the secondary instability analysis based on a two-dimensional eigenvalue approach. The predicted evolution of stationary crossflow vortices is in close agreement with the experimental data. The suppression of naturally dominant crossflow modes by artificial roughness distribution at a subcritical spacing is also confirmed. The analysis reveals a number of secondary instability modes belonging to two basic families which, in some sense, are akin to the ‘horseshoe’ and ‘sinuous’ modes of the Görtler vortex problem. The frequency range of the secondary instability is consistent with that measured in earlier experiments by Kohama et al. (1991), as is the overall growth of the secondary instability mode prior to the onset of transition (e.g. Kohama et al. 1996). Results indicate that the N-factor correlation based on secondary instability growth rates may yield a more robust criterion for transition onset prediction in comparison with an absolute amplitude criterion that is based on primary instability alone.

2015 ◽  
Vol 798 ◽  
pp. 627-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ling Zhou ◽  
Chao Yan ◽  
Zi Hui Hao ◽  
Wei Xuan Kong

A “laminar + transition criteria” model utilizingReθ/MeandReCFcriteria in conjunction with an intermittency functionΓis developed in this paper. With pretreated computational grid and total enthalpyh0=(h0,∞)maxcriteria the boundary layer edge and crossflow velocity can be obtained by using parallel methodology. Validation is accomplished via HIFiRE-5 and a blunt cone with small angle of attack. Results show that computedReθ/MeandReCFdistributions are similar to theN-factor for streamwise instability and crossflow instability from linear PSE methods. The shape and trend of transition regions predicted by the “laminar + transition criteria” model in HIFiRE-5 and blunt cone are in good agreement with the experiment and DNS. However, for the transition induced by inflection point on streamwise velocity profiles, using criteria related to boundary layer thickness is inappropriate and can predict transition onset prematurely.


AIAA Journal ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 33 (11) ◽  
pp. 2032-2037 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. N. Cattafesta ◽  
V. Iyer ◽  
J. A. Masad ◽  
R. A. King ◽  
J. R. Dagenhart

1994 ◽  
Vol 268 ◽  
pp. 1-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Malik ◽  
F. Li ◽  
C.-L. Chang

Nonlinear stability of a model swept-wing boundary layer, subject to crossflow instability, is investigated by numerically solving the governing partial differential equations. The three-dimensional boundary layer is unstable to both stationary and travelling crossflow disturbances. Nonlinear calculations have been carried out for stationary vortices and the computed wall vorticity pattern results in streamwise streaks which resemble quite well the surface oil-flow visualizations in swept-wing experiments. Other features of the stationary vortex development (half-mushroom structure, inflected velocity profiles, vortex doubling, etc.) are also captured in these calculations. Nonlinear interaction of the stationary and travelling waves is also studied. When initial amplitude of the stationary vortex is larger than the travelling mode, the stationary vortex dominates most of the downstream development. When the two modes have the same initial amplitude, the travelling mode dominates the downstream development owing to its higher growth rate. It is also found that, prior to laminar/turbulent transition, the three-dimensional boundary layer is subject to a high-frequency secondary instability, which is in agreement with the experiments of Poll (1985) and Kohama, Saric & Hoos (1991). The frequency of this secondary instability, which resides on top of the stationary crossflow vortex, is an order of magnitude higher than the frequency of the most-amplified travelling crossflow mode.


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