Experiments were carried out to assess the influence of spanwise spacing between adjacent orifices of an air-jet vortex-generator (AJVG) array on their separation-control effectiveness. The array was applied to a 24° compression-ramp-induced shock-wave / turbulent boundary-layer interaction at M∞= 2.52 and Reθ= 8225. Three spanwise oriented AJVG arrays of small, intermediate, and large jet spacings were studied. Their influence on the mean-flow organisation and turbulence quantities was assessed using flow visualisations and planar particle image velocimetry across multiple measurement planes. The streamwise vortices induced by the AJVGs incited different control effects depending on the degree of interaction between adjacent vortices. The array with intermediate spacing achieved the most favourable effects with reductions in separation length and area of about 25 % and 52 % , respectively. This reduction was brought about by the formation of stable, interacting streamwise-elongated coherent vortices downstream of jet injection and the associated entrainment of high-momentum fluid. The smallest jet spacing incites vortex interactions to adverse strength, breaking up the coherent structures and even increasing separation. The AJVGs with the largest spacing display characteristics similar to single jets in crossflow, with only a local modification of the separation region. Turbulent quantities are amplified both by the jets and the separation-inducing shock; AJVG control reduces the amplification across the shock-wave/boundary-layer interaction and the intermediate jet spacing is most effective also here.
CITATION STYLE
Ramaswamy, D. P., & Schreyer, A. M. (2022). Effects of Jet-to-Jet Spacing of Air-Jet Vortex Generators in Shock-Induced Flow-Separation Control. Flow, Turbulence and Combustion, 109(1), 35–64. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10494-022-00324-y
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