Delay of swept-wing transition using a surface hump

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

Alberto F. Rius-Vidales (TU Delft - Ship Hydromechanics and Structures)

Luis Morais (Student TU Delft)

S.H.J. Westerbeek (TU Delft - Aerodynamics)

J. Casacuberta Puig (TU Delft - Aerodynamics)

Mustafa Soyler (Osmaniye Korkut Ata University)

Kotsonis Marios (TU Delft - Aerodynamics)

Research Group
Ship Hydromechanics and Structures
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2025.403
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Ship Hydromechanics and Structures
Volume number
1014
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Abstract

This work explores the use of a shallow surface hump for passive control and stabilisation of stationary crossflow (CF) instabilities. Wind tunnel experiments are conducted on a spanwise-invariant swept-wing model. The influence of the hump on the boundary layer stability and laminar-turbulent transition is assessed through infrared thermography and particle image velocimetry measurements. The results reveal a strong dependence of the stabilisation effect on the amplitude of the incoming CF disturbances, which is conditioned via discrete roughness elements at the wing leading edge. At a high forcing amplitude, weakly nonlinear stationary CF vortices interact with the hump and result in an abrupt anticipation of transition, essentially tripping the flow. In contrast, at a lower forcing amplitude, CF vortices interact with the hump during linear growth. Notable stabilisation of the primary CF disturbance and considerable transition delay with respect to the reference case (i.e. without hump) is then observed. The spatial region just downstream of the hump apex is shown to be key to the stabilisation mechanism. In this region, the primary CF disturbances rapidly change spanwise orientation and shape, possibly driven by the pressure gradient change-over caused by the hump and the development of CF reversal. The amplitude and shape deformation of the primary CF instabilities are found to contribute to a long-lasting suboptimal growth downstream of the hump, eventually leading to transition delay.