Experimental investigation of mach number and pressure gradient effects on boundary layer transition in two-dimensional flow

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Abstract

The influence of Mach number (M = 0.35 –0.65), chord Reynolds number (Rec=6× 106 to 10× 106 ) and pressure gradient (dcp/dx = -0.6 –0.07 m-1) on laminar-turbulent boundary layer transition was experimentally investigated in the Cryogenic Ludwieg-Tube Göttingen (DNW-KRG). For this investigation the existing two-dimensional wind tunnel model, PaLASTra, which offers a quasi-uniform streamwise pressure gradient, was modified in order to reduce the size of the flow separation at its trailing edge. The streamwise temperature distribution and the location of laminar-turbulent transition were measured by means of temperature-sensitive paint (TSP). It was found that the transition Reynolds number exhibits a linear dependence on the pressure gradient, characterized by the Hartree parameter, and that an increasing Mach number leads to a linear decrease of the transition Reynolds number. The latter effect is likely due to an increase of the total pressure turbulence level with Mach number in DNW-KRG. The measured pressure and temperature distributions served as input for boundary layer calculations and linear-stability analysis. N-factors were calculated according to compressible and incompressible stability theory. At zero pressure gradient a critical N-factor of approximately 9.5 and 9.0 was found for incompressible and compressible calculations, respectively.

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Risius, S., Costantini, M., Hein, S., Koch, S., & Klein, C. (2018). Experimental investigation of mach number and pressure gradient effects on boundary layer transition in two-dimensional flow. In Notes on Numerical Fluid Mechanics and Multidisciplinary Design (Vol. 136, pp. 305–314). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64519-3_28

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