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Measurements of Unsteady Wake Interference Between Tandem Cylinders
Author(s) -
Luther N. Jenkins,
Dan Neuhart,
Cathy McGinley,
Mehdi R. Khorrami,
Meelan M. Choudhari
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
36th aiaa fluid dynamics conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2006-3202
Subject(s) - wake , tandem , interference (communication) , computer science , aerospace engineering , physics , telecommunications , mechanics , engineering , channel (broadcasting)
†A multi-phase, experimental study in the Basic Aerodynamics Research Tunnel at the NASA Langley Research Center has provided new insight into the unsteady flow interaction around cylinders in tandem arrangement. Phase 1 of the study characterized the mean and unsteady near-field flow around two cylinders of equal diameter using 2-D Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) and hot-wire anemometry. These measurements were performed at a Reynolds number of 1.66 x 10 5 , based on cylinder diameter, and spacing-to-diameter ratios, L/D, of 1.435 and 3.7. The current phase, Phase 2, augments this dataset by characterizing the surface flow on the same configurations using steady and unsteady pressure measurements and surface flow visualization. Transition strips were applied to the front cylinder during both phases to produce a turbulent boundary layer upstream of the flow separation. For these flow conditions and L/D ratios, surface pressures on both the front and rear cylinders show the effects of L/D on flow symmetry, pressure recovery, and the location of flow separation and attachment. Mean streamlines and instantaneous vorticity obtained from the PIV data are used to explain the flow structure in the gap and near-wake regions and its relationship to the unsteady surface pressures. The combination of off-body and surface measurements provides a comprehensive dataset to develop and validate computational techniques for predicting the unsteady flow field at higher Reynolds numbers.

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