Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe
Numerical solutions of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations are obtained to study the time evolution of both axisymmetric and three-dimensional perturbations to a base solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe with non-periodic boundary conditions imposed at the pipe inlet and outlet. I...
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doaj-80142f834f2341fea56af08c1b32dbfe2020-11-24T22:08:34ZengAIP Publishing LLCAIP Advances2158-32262017-09-0179095112095112-1210.1063/1.4993643047709ADVInstability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipeChunjuan Feng0Feng Liu1Zvi Rusak2Shixiao Wang3Department of Fluid Mechanics Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi’an 710072, ChinaDepartment of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-3975, USADepartment of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180-3590, USADepartment of Mathematics University of Auckland, 38 Princes Street, Auckland, 1142, New ZealandNumerical solutions of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations are obtained to study the time evolution of both axisymmetric and three-dimensional perturbations to a base solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe with non-periodic boundary conditions imposed at the pipe inlet and outlet. It is found that for a given Reynolds number there exists a critical swirl number beyond which the initial perturbations grow, in contrast to the solid-body rotation flow in an infinitely-long pipe or a finite-length pipe with periodic inlet and exit boundary conditions for which the classical Kelvin analysis and Rayleigh stability criterion affirm neutrally stable for all levels of swirl. This paper uncovers for the first time the detailed evolution of the perturbations in both the axisymmetric and three-dimensional situations. The computations reveal a linear growth stage of the perturbations with a constant growth rate after a brief initial period of decay of the imposed initial perturbations. The fastest growing axisymmetric and three-dimensional instability modes and the associated growth rates are identified numerically for the first time. The computations show that the critical swirl number increases and the growth rate of instability decreases at the same swirl number with decreasing Reynolds number. The growth rate of the axisymmetric mode at high Reynolds number agrees well with previous stability theory for inviscid flow. More importantly, three-dimensional simulations uncover that the most unstable mode is the spiral type m = 1 mode, which appears at a lower critical swirl number than that for the onset of the axisymmetric mode. This spiral mode grows faster than the unstable axisymmetric mode at the same swirl. Moreover, the computations reveal that after the linear growing stage of the perturbation the flow continues to evolve nonlinearly to a saturated axisymmetric vortex breakdown state.http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4993643 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Chunjuan Feng Feng Liu Zvi Rusak Shixiao Wang |
spellingShingle |
Chunjuan Feng Feng Liu Zvi Rusak Shixiao Wang Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe AIP Advances |
author_facet |
Chunjuan Feng Feng Liu Zvi Rusak Shixiao Wang |
author_sort |
Chunjuan Feng |
title |
Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe |
title_short |
Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe |
title_full |
Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe |
title_fullStr |
Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe |
title_full_unstemmed |
Instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe |
title_sort |
instability modes on a solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe |
publisher |
AIP Publishing LLC |
series |
AIP Advances |
issn |
2158-3226 |
publishDate |
2017-09-01 |
description |
Numerical solutions of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations are obtained to study the time evolution of both axisymmetric and three-dimensional perturbations to a base solid-body-rotation flow in a finite-length pipe with non-periodic boundary conditions imposed at the pipe inlet and outlet. It is found that for a given Reynolds number there exists a critical swirl number beyond which the initial perturbations grow, in contrast to the solid-body rotation flow in an infinitely-long pipe or a finite-length pipe with periodic inlet and exit boundary conditions for which the classical Kelvin analysis and Rayleigh stability criterion affirm neutrally stable for all levels of swirl. This paper uncovers for the first time the detailed evolution of the perturbations in both the axisymmetric and three-dimensional situations. The computations reveal a linear growth stage of the perturbations with a constant growth rate after a brief initial period of decay of the imposed initial perturbations. The fastest growing axisymmetric and three-dimensional instability modes and the associated growth rates are identified numerically for the first time. The computations show that the critical swirl number increases and the growth rate of instability decreases at the same swirl number with decreasing Reynolds number. The growth rate of the axisymmetric mode at high Reynolds number agrees well with previous stability theory for inviscid flow. More importantly, three-dimensional simulations uncover that the most unstable mode is the spiral type m = 1 mode, which appears at a lower critical swirl number than that for the onset of the axisymmetric mode. This spiral mode grows faster than the unstable axisymmetric mode at the same swirl. Moreover, the computations reveal that after the linear growing stage of the perturbation the flow continues to evolve nonlinearly to a saturated axisymmetric vortex breakdown state. |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4993643 |
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