High-speed vehicles experience a highly challenging environment in which the freestream Mach number and surface temperature greatly influence aerodynamic drag and heat transfer. The interplay of these two parameters strongly affects the near-wall dynamics of high-speed turbulent boundary layers (TBLs) in a non-trivial way, breaking similarity arguments on velocity and temperature fields, typically derived for adiabatic cases. We present direct numerical simulations of flat-plate zero-pressure-gradient TBLs spanning three freestream Mach numbers and four wall temperature conditions (from adiabatic to very cold walls), emphasising the choice of the wall-cooling parameter to recover a similar flow organisation at different Mach numbers. We link qualitative observations on flow patterns to first- and second-order statistics to explain the decoupling of temperature-velocity fluctuations that occurs at reduced wall temperatures and high Mach numbers. For these cases, we discuss the formation of a secondary peak of thermal production in the viscous sublayer, which is in contrast with the monotonic behaviour of adiabatic profiles. We propose different physical mechanisms induced by wall-cooling and compressibility that result in apparently similar flow features, such as a higher peak in the streamwise velocity turbulence intensity, and distinct features, such as the separation of turbulent scales.

Assessment of heat transfer and Mach number effects on high-speed turbulent boundary layers / Cogo, M.; Bau, U.; Chinappi, M.; Bernardini, M.; Picano, F.. - In: JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS. - ISSN 0022-1120. - 974:A10(2023). [10.1017/jfm.2023.791]

Assessment of heat transfer and Mach number effects on high-speed turbulent boundary layers

Cogo M.;Chinappi M.;Bernardini M.;
2023

Abstract

High-speed vehicles experience a highly challenging environment in which the freestream Mach number and surface temperature greatly influence aerodynamic drag and heat transfer. The interplay of these two parameters strongly affects the near-wall dynamics of high-speed turbulent boundary layers (TBLs) in a non-trivial way, breaking similarity arguments on velocity and temperature fields, typically derived for adiabatic cases. We present direct numerical simulations of flat-plate zero-pressure-gradient TBLs spanning three freestream Mach numbers and four wall temperature conditions (from adiabatic to very cold walls), emphasising the choice of the wall-cooling parameter to recover a similar flow organisation at different Mach numbers. We link qualitative observations on flow patterns to first- and second-order statistics to explain the decoupling of temperature-velocity fluctuations that occurs at reduced wall temperatures and high Mach numbers. For these cases, we discuss the formation of a secondary peak of thermal production in the viscous sublayer, which is in contrast with the monotonic behaviour of adiabatic profiles. We propose different physical mechanisms induced by wall-cooling and compressibility that result in apparently similar flow features, such as a higher peak in the streamwise velocity turbulence intensity, and distinct features, such as the separation of turbulent scales.
2023
compressible boundary layers; turbulent boundary layers
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Assessment of heat transfer and Mach number effects on high-speed turbulent boundary layers / Cogo, M.; Bau, U.; Chinappi, M.; Bernardini, M.; Picano, F.. - In: JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS. - ISSN 0022-1120. - 974:A10(2023). [10.1017/jfm.2023.791]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1749884
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