Dong Sun, Qilong Guo, Xianxu Yuan, Chen Li, Pengxin Liu
{"title":"High-enthalpy effects on turbulent coherent structures over a curved compression corner","authors":"Dong Sun, Qilong Guo, Xianxu Yuan, Chen Li, Pengxin Liu","doi":"10.1080/14685248.2022.2155299","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Direct numerical simulation (DNS) is performed to study high-enthalpy effects on a turbulent boundary layer (TBL) over a curved compression corner. The post-shock flow state behind a wedge flying at Mach 20 and at an altitude of 30 km are chosen for the present simulation. The post-shock temperature is 3400 K, which is high enough to trigger chemical non-equilibrium of the air. A low-enthalpy case is used for comparison. The influences on the instantaneous structures of the streamwise velocity, temperature, and oxygen atoms are examined. The results show that the flow structures are similar on an upstream flat plate in both cases, while on a ramp, streaks of streamwise velocity fluctuations in the high-enthalpy case experience stronger shrink compared with that in the low-enthalpy case. Furthermore, streaks of temperature break into smaller ones when dissociation reactions are introduced. Qualitative and quantitative comparisons are made with the low-enthalpy case; performed using two-point streamwise wall-normal correlation, space–time correlation, and by comparing the propagation velocities of the fluctuations. The results of these analyses validate the observations about the instantaneous fluctuations and show that the differences in the propagation velocity are affected by convection effects and chemical reactions, and that the dissociation reactions accelerate the propagation of temperature fluctuations.","PeriodicalId":49967,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Turbulence","volume":"23 1","pages":"615 - 635"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Turbulence","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14685248.2022.2155299","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MECHANICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Direct numerical simulation (DNS) is performed to study high-enthalpy effects on a turbulent boundary layer (TBL) over a curved compression corner. The post-shock flow state behind a wedge flying at Mach 20 and at an altitude of 30 km are chosen for the present simulation. The post-shock temperature is 3400 K, which is high enough to trigger chemical non-equilibrium of the air. A low-enthalpy case is used for comparison. The influences on the instantaneous structures of the streamwise velocity, temperature, and oxygen atoms are examined. The results show that the flow structures are similar on an upstream flat plate in both cases, while on a ramp, streaks of streamwise velocity fluctuations in the high-enthalpy case experience stronger shrink compared with that in the low-enthalpy case. Furthermore, streaks of temperature break into smaller ones when dissociation reactions are introduced. Qualitative and quantitative comparisons are made with the low-enthalpy case; performed using two-point streamwise wall-normal correlation, space–time correlation, and by comparing the propagation velocities of the fluctuations. The results of these analyses validate the observations about the instantaneous fluctuations and show that the differences in the propagation velocity are affected by convection effects and chemical reactions, and that the dissociation reactions accelerate the propagation of temperature fluctuations.
IF 0 Food frontiersPub Date : 2021-04-07DOI: 10.1002/fft2.75
Laura Lavefve, Natacha Cureau, Lindsey Rodhouse, Daya Marasini, Laura M. Walker, Danielle Ashley, Sun-Ok Lee, Pascale Gadonna-Widehem, Pauline M. Anton, Franck Carbonero
期刊介绍:
Turbulence is a physical phenomenon occurring in most fluid flows, and is a major research topic at the cutting edge of science and technology. Journal of Turbulence ( JoT) is a digital forum for disseminating new theoretical, numerical and experimental knowledge aimed at understanding, predicting and controlling fluid turbulence.
JoT provides a common venue for communicating advances of fundamental and applied character across the many disciplines in which turbulence plays a vital role. Examples include turbulence arising in engineering fluid dynamics (aerodynamics and hydrodynamics, particulate and multi-phase flows, acoustics, hydraulics, combustion, aeroelasticity, transitional flows, turbo-machinery, heat transfer), geophysical fluid dynamics (environmental flows, oceanography, meteorology), in physics (magnetohydrodynamics and fusion, astrophysics, cryogenic and quantum fluids), and mathematics (turbulence from PDE’s, model systems). The multimedia capabilities offered by this electronic journal (including free colour images and video movies), provide a unique opportunity for disseminating turbulence research in visually impressive ways.