Turbulence measurements in a heated, concave boundary layer under high-free-stream turbulence conditions

M. D. Kestoras, T. W. Simon

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Abstract

Turbulence measurements for both momentum and heat transfer are taken in a lowvelocity, turbulent boundary layer growing naturally over a concave wall. The experiments are conducted with negligible streamwise acceleration and a nominal freestream turbulence intensity of ∼8 percent. Comparisons are made with data taken in an earlier study in the same test facility but with a 0.6 percent free-stream turbulence intensity. Results show that elevated free-stream turbulence intensity enhances turbulence transport quantities like uv and vt in most of the boundary layer. In contrast to the low-turbulence cases, high levels of transport of momentum are measured outside the boundary layer. Stable, Gortlerlike vortices, present in the flow under low-turbulence conditions, do not form when the free-stream turbulence intensity is elevated. Turbulent Prandtl numbers, Pr0 within the log region of the boundary layer over the concave wall increase with streamwise distance to values as high as 1.2. Profiles of Pr, suggest that the increase in momentum transport with increased freestream turbulence intensity precedes the increase in heat transport. Distributions of near-wall mixing length for momentum remain unchanged on the concave wall when free-stream turbulence intensity is elevated. Both for this level of free-stream turbulence and for the lower level, mixing length distributions increase linearly with distance from the wall, following the standard slope. However, when free-stream turbulence intensity is elevated, this linear region extends farther into the boundary layer, indicating the emerging importance of larger eddies in the wake of the boundary layer with the high-turbulence free stream. Because these eddies are damped by the wall, the influence of the wall grows with eddy size.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)172-180
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Turbomachinery
Volume118
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1996

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