Direct numerical simulation of complete transition to turbulence via oblique breakdown at Mach 3

Journal Article (2011)
Author(s)

Christian Mayer (ExxonMobil Upstream Research Company, University of Arizona)

D. A. Terzi (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie, University of Arizona)

Hermann F Fasel (University of Arizona)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022112010005094
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Publication Year
2011
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Volume number
674
Pages (from-to)
5-42

Abstract

A pair of oblique waves at low amplitudes is introduced in a supersonic flat-plate boundary layer at Mach 3. Its downstream development and the concomitant process of laminar to turbulent transition is then investigated numerically using linear-stability theory, parabolized stability equations and direct numerical simulations (DNS). In the present paper, the linear regime is studied first in great detail. The focus of the second part is the early and late nonlinear regimes. It is shown how the disturbance wave spectrum is filled up by nonlinear interactions and which flow structures arise and how these structures locally break down to small scales. Finally, the study answers the question whether a fully developed turbulent boundary layer can be reached by oblique breakdown. It is shown that the skin friction develops such as is typical of transitional and turbulent boundary layers. Initially, the skin friction coefficient increases in the streamwise direction in the transitional region and finally decays when the early turbulent state is reached. Downstream of the maximum in the skin friction, the flow loses its periodicity in time and possesses characteristic mean-flow and spectral properties of a turbulent boundary layer. The DNS data clearly demonstrate that oblique breakdown can lead to a fully developed turbulent boundary layer and therefore it is a relevant mechanism for transition in two-dimensional supersonic boundary layers.

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