Rapid Transition to Turbulence in Pipe Flows Accelerated From Rest

2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (6) ◽  
pp. 1072-1075 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Greenblatt ◽  
Edward A. Moss

Rapid transition to turbulence in a pipe flow, initially at rest, was achieved by temporally accelerating the flow and then sharply decelerating it to its final Reynolds number. The acceleration phase was characterized by the growth of a laminar boundary layer close to the wall. The subsequent rapid deceleration resulted in inflectional velocity profiles near the wall, followed immediately by transition to turbulence. The time taken to transition was significantly less than the time to transition in a pipe flow monotonically accelerated to the same Reynolds number. Transition is intrinsically different to that observed in oscillatory pipe flows, but is qualitatively similar to pipe flows decelerated to rest.

1998 ◽  
Vol 374 ◽  
pp. 251-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
DEBOPAM DAS ◽  
JAYWANT H. ARAKERI

This paper deals with the stability and transition to turbulence of wall-bounded unsteady velocity profiles with reverse flow. Such flows occur, for example, during unsteady boundary layer separation and in oscillating pipe flow. The main focus is on results from experiments in time-developing flow in a long pipe, which is decelerated rapidly. The flow is generated by the controlled motion of a piston. We obtain analytical solutions for laminar flow in the pipe and in a two-dimensional channel for arbitrary piston motions. By changing the piston speed and the length of piston travel we cover a range of values of Reynolds number and boundary layer thickness. The velocity profiles during the decay of the flow are unsteady with reverse flow near the wall, and are highly unstable due to their inflectional nature. In the pipe, we observe from flow visualization that the flow becomes unstable with the formation of what appears to be a helical vortex. The wavelength of the instability ≃3δ where δ is the average boundary layer thickness, the average being taken over the time the flow is unstable. The time of formation of the vortices scales with the average convective time scale and is ≃39/(Δū/δ), where Δu=(umax−umin) and umax, umin and δ are the maximum velocity, minimum velocity and boundary layer thickness respectively at each instant of time. The time to transition to turbulence is ≃33/(Δū/δ). Quasi-steady linear stability analysis of the velocity profiles brings out two important results. First that the stability characteristics of velocity profiles with reverse flow near the wall collapse when scaled with the above variables. Second that the wavenumber corresponding to maximum growth does not change much during the instability even though the velocity profile does change substantially. Using the results from the experiments and the stability analysis, we are able to explain many aspects of transition in oscillating pipe flow. We postulate that unsteady boundary layer separation at high Reynolds numbers is probably related to instability of the reverse flow region.


Actuators ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 185
Author(s):  
Zuzana Antošová ◽  
Zdeněk Trávníček

This paper deals with active control of a continuous jet issuing from a long pipe nozzle by means of a concentrically placed annular synthetic jet. The experiments in air cover regimes of laminar, transitional, and turbulent main jet flows (Reynolds number ranges 1082–5181). The velocity profiles (time-mean and fluctuation components) of unforced and forced jets were measured using hot-wire anemometry. Six flow regimes are distinguished, and their parameter map is proposed. The possibility of turbulence reduction by forcing in transitional jets is demonstrated, and the maximal effect is revealed at Re = 2555, where the ratio of the turbulence intensities of the forced and unforced jets is decreased up to 0.45.


1959 ◽  
Vol 63 (588) ◽  
pp. 722-722
Author(s):  
R. L. Dommett

It has been found that there is a critical height for “sandpaper” type roughness below which no measurable disturbances are introduced into a laminar boundary layer and above which transition is initiated at the roughness. Braslow and Knox have proposed a method of predicting this height, for flow over a flat plate or a cone, using exact solutions of the laminar boundary layer equations combined with a correlation of experimental results in terms of a Reynolds number based on roughness height, k, and local conditions at the top of the elements. A simpler, yet more general, method can be constructed by taking additional advantage of the linearity of the velocity profile near the wall in a laminar boundary layer.


1984 ◽  
Vol 148 ◽  
pp. 193-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. R. Akylas ◽  
J.-P. Demurger

A theoretical study is made of the stability of pipe flow with superimposed rigid rotation to finite-amplitude disturbances at high Reynolds number. The non-axisymmetric mode that requires the least amount of rotation for linear instability is considered. An amplitude expansion is developed close to the corresponding neutral stability curve; the appropriate Landau constant is calculated. It is demonstrated that the flow exhibits nonlinear subcritical instability, the nonlinear effects being particularly strong owing to the large magnitude of the Landau constant. These findings support the view that a small amount of extraneous rotation could play a significant role in the transition to turbulence of pipe flow.


1983 ◽  
Vol 105 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Motohashi ◽  
R. F. Blackwelder

To study boundary layers in the transitional Reynolds number regime, the useful spanwise and streamwise extent of wind tunnels is often limited by turbulent fluid emanating from the side walls. Some or all of the turbulent fluid can be removed by sucking fluid out at the corners, as suggested by Amini [1]. It is shown that by optimizing the suction slot width, the side wall contamination can be dramatically decreased without a concomitant three-dimensional distortion of the laminar boundary layer.


1976 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikio Hino ◽  
Masaki Sawamoto ◽  
Shuji Takasu

Experiments on transition to turbulence in a purely oscillatory pipe flow were performed for values of the Reynolds number Rδ, defined using the Stokes-layer thickness δ = (2ν/ω)½ and the cross-sectional mean velocity amplitude Û, from 19 to 1530 (or for values of the Reynolds number Re, defined using the pipe diameter d and Û, from 105 to 5830) and for values of the Stokes parameter λ = ½d(ω/2ν)½ (ν = kinematic viscosity and ω = angular frequency) from 1·35 to 6·19. Three types of turbulent flow regime have been detected: weakly turbulent flow, conditionally turbulent flow and fully turbulent flow. Demarcation of the flow regimes is possible on Rλ, λ or Re, λ diagrams. The critical Reynolds number of the first transition decreases as the Stokes parameter increases. In the conditionally turbulent flow, turbulence is generated suddenly in the decelerating phase and the profile of the velocity distribution changes drastically. In the accelerating phase, the flow recovers to laminar. This type of partially turbulent flow persists even at Reynolds numbers as high as Re = 5830 if the value of the Stokes parameter is high.


2016 ◽  
Vol 801 ◽  
pp. 289-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Balzer ◽  
H. F. Fasel

The aerodynamic performance of lifting surfaces operating at low Reynolds number conditions is impaired by laminar separation. In most cases, transition to turbulence occurs in the separated shear layer as a result of a series of strong hydrodynamic instability mechanisms. Although the understanding of these mechanisms has been significantly advanced over the past decades, key questions remain unanswered about the influence of external factors such as free-stream turbulence (FST) and others on transition and separation. The present study is driven by the need for more accurate predictions of separation and transition phenomena in ‘real world’ applications, where elevated levels of FST can play a significant role (e.g. turbomachinery). Numerical investigations have become an integral part in the effort to enhance our understanding of the intricate interactions between separation and transition. Due to the development of advanced numerical methods and the increase in the performance of supercomputers with parallel architecture, it has become feasible for low Reynolds number application ($O(10^{5})$) to carry out direct numerical simulations (DNS) such that all relevant spatial and temporal scales are resolved without the use of turbulence modelling. Because the employed high-order accurate DNS are characterized by very low levels of background noise, they lend themselves to transition research where the amplification of small disturbances, sometimes even growing from numerical round-off, can be examined in great detail. When comparing results from DNS and experiment, however, it is beneficial, if not necessary, to increase the background disturbance levels in the DNS to levels that are typical for the experiment. For the current work, a numerical model that emulates a realistic free-stream turbulent environment was adapted and implemented into an existing Navier–Stokes code based on a vorticity–velocity formulation. The role FST plays in the transition process was then investigated for a laminar separation bubble forming on a flat plate. FST was shown to cause the formation of the well-known Klebanoff mode that is represented by streamwise-elongated streaks inside the boundary layer. Increasing the FST levels led to accelerated transition, a reduction in bubble size and better agreement with the experiments. Moreover, the stage of linear disturbance growth due to the inviscid shear-layer instability was found to not be ‘bypassed’.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document