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Sustained drag reduction in a turbulent flow using a low-temperature Leidenfrost surface
Author(s) -
Dhananjai Saranadhi,
Dayong Chen,
Justin A. Kleingartner,
Siddarth Srinivasan,
Robert E. Cohen,
Gareth H. McKinley
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1600686
Subject(s) - drag , leidenfrost effect , turbulence , mechanics , flow (mathematics) , reduction (mathematics) , materials science , environmental science , physics , mathematics , heat transfer , nucleate boiling , geometry , heat transfer coefficient
Skin friction drag contributes a major portion of the total drag for small and large water vehicles at high Reynolds number (Re). One emerging approach to reducing drag is to use superhydrophobic surfaces to promote slip boundary conditions. However, the air layer or “plastron” trapped on submerged superhydrophobic surfaces often diminishes quickly under hydrostatic pressure and/or turbulent pressure fluctuations. We use active heating on a superhydrophobic surface to establish a stable vapor layer or “Leidenfrost” state at a relatively low superheat temperature. The continuous film of water vapor lubricates the interface, and the resulting slip boundary condition leads to skin friction drag reduction on the inner rotor of a custom Taylor-Couette apparatus. We find that skin friction can be reduced by 80 to 90% relative to an unheated superhydrophobic surface for Re in the range 26,100 ≤ Re ≤ 52,000. We derive a boundary layer and slip theory to describe the hydrodynamics in the system and show that the plastron thickness is h = 44 ± 11 μm, in agreement with expectations for a Leidenfrost surface.United States. Office of Naval Research (Contract 3002453814

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