Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump

Active flow control techniques such as synthetic jets have been successful in increasing the performance of naturally separating flows on post-stall airfoils, bluff body shedding, and internal flows such as wide-angle diffusers. However, in order to implement robust control techniques there is a nee...

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Main Author: Franck, Jennifer Ann
Format: Others
Published: 2009
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/5221/1/Thesis_Franck.pdf
Franck, Jennifer Ann (2009) Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/DH38-D592. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247>
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-52212019-11-27T03:09:51Z Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump Franck, Jennifer Ann Active flow control techniques such as synthetic jets have been successful in increasing the performance of naturally separating flows on post-stall airfoils, bluff body shedding, and internal flows such as wide-angle diffusers. However, in order to implement robust control techniques there is a need for accurate computational tools capable of predicting unsteady separation and control at high Reynolds numbers. This thesis developed a compressible large-eddy simulation (LES) and validated it by simulating the turbulent flow over a wall-mounted hump. The flow is characterized by an unsteady, turbulent recirculation region along the trailing edge of the geometry, and is simulated at a Reynolds number of 500,000. Active flow control is applied just before the natural separation point via steady suction and zero-net mass flux oscillatory forcing. The addition of control is shown to be effective in decreasing the size of the separation bubble and pressure drag. LES baseline and controlled results are validated against previously performed experiments by Seifert and Pack and those performed for the NASA Langley Workshop on Turbulent Flow Separation and Control. Three test cases are explored to determine the effect of explicit filtering and the Smagorinsky subgrid scale model on the average flow and turbulent statistics. The flow physics and the control effectiveness are investigated at two Mach numbers, M=0.25 and M=0.6. Compressibility is shown to increase the separation bubble length in the baseline case, but does not significantly change the effectiveness of the control. In terms of decreasing drag on the wall-mounted hump model, steady suction is more effective than oscillatory control, but both control techniques are effective in reducing the separation bubble length. Two-dimensional direct numerical simulations (DNS) of the wall-mounted hump flow are also presented, and the results show different baseline flow features than the 3D LES. However the controlled 2D flow gives an indication of the most receptive actuation frequencies around twice that of the natural shedding frequency. Two regimes of reduced actuation frequency are also explored with the 3D LES. It is found that the low frequency actuation is successful in reducing the separation bubble length, but high frequency actuation produces an average flow comparable to the baseline case, and does not result in drag or separation bubble length reduction. 2009 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/5221/1/Thesis_Franck.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247 Franck, Jennifer Ann (2009) Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/DH38-D592. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247> https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/5221/
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description Active flow control techniques such as synthetic jets have been successful in increasing the performance of naturally separating flows on post-stall airfoils, bluff body shedding, and internal flows such as wide-angle diffusers. However, in order to implement robust control techniques there is a need for accurate computational tools capable of predicting unsteady separation and control at high Reynolds numbers. This thesis developed a compressible large-eddy simulation (LES) and validated it by simulating the turbulent flow over a wall-mounted hump. The flow is characterized by an unsteady, turbulent recirculation region along the trailing edge of the geometry, and is simulated at a Reynolds number of 500,000. Active flow control is applied just before the natural separation point via steady suction and zero-net mass flux oscillatory forcing. The addition of control is shown to be effective in decreasing the size of the separation bubble and pressure drag. LES baseline and controlled results are validated against previously performed experiments by Seifert and Pack and those performed for the NASA Langley Workshop on Turbulent Flow Separation and Control. Three test cases are explored to determine the effect of explicit filtering and the Smagorinsky subgrid scale model on the average flow and turbulent statistics. The flow physics and the control effectiveness are investigated at two Mach numbers, M=0.25 and M=0.6. Compressibility is shown to increase the separation bubble length in the baseline case, but does not significantly change the effectiveness of the control. In terms of decreasing drag on the wall-mounted hump model, steady suction is more effective than oscillatory control, but both control techniques are effective in reducing the separation bubble length. Two-dimensional direct numerical simulations (DNS) of the wall-mounted hump flow are also presented, and the results show different baseline flow features than the 3D LES. However the controlled 2D flow gives an indication of the most receptive actuation frequencies around twice that of the natural shedding frequency. Two regimes of reduced actuation frequency are also explored with the 3D LES. It is found that the low frequency actuation is successful in reducing the separation bubble length, but high frequency actuation produces an average flow comparable to the baseline case, and does not result in drag or separation bubble length reduction.
author Franck, Jennifer Ann
spellingShingle Franck, Jennifer Ann
Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump
author_facet Franck, Jennifer Ann
author_sort Franck, Jennifer Ann
title Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump
title_short Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump
title_full Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump
title_fullStr Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump
title_full_unstemmed Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump
title_sort large-eddy simulation of flow separation and control on a wall-mounted hump
publishDate 2009
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/5221/1/Thesis_Franck.pdf
Franck, Jennifer Ann (2009) Large-Eddy Simulation of Flow Separation and Control on a Wall-Mounted Hump. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/DH38-D592. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06022009-183247>
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