Boundary layer transition of hypersonic flow over a delta wing
Hongtian Qiu, Mingtao Shi, Yiding Zhu, Cunbiao Lee
Abstract
Cross-flow transition over a delta wing is systematically studied in a Mach 6.5 hypersonic wind tunnel, employing the Rayleigh scattering flow visualisation, high-speed schlieren and fast-response pressure sensors. Direct numerical simulations and analysis based on linear stability theory under the same flow conditions are applied to analyse the transition mechanism. Three unstable modes are identified: the travelling cross-flow instabilities, the second mode and the low-frequency waves. It is shown that the travelling cross-flow vortices first appear in the cross-flow region near the leading edge of the model. These vortices can modulate the mean profile of the flow, which benefits the growth of second mode. A phase-locked interaction mechanism transfers energy from the cross-flow instabilities to the high-frequency second mode, leading to amplification at the expense of the cross-flow instability. As the second mode grows to a critical amplitude, it triggers a $z$ -type secondary instability within a similar frequency range, which introduces secondary finger-like structures connecting to the cross-flow vortex. It is further found that the generation of these finger-like structures is related to the expansion and compression of the second mode. These finger vortices further evolve along the streamwise direction into low-frequency waves and corresponding hairpin-like structures that finally trigger turbulence. An interaction mechanism likely exists between the secondary instability and the low-frequency waves, since their phase speeds are approaching each other. These observations of the interaction mechanism are consistent with those of previous studies on hypersonic boundary layers (Zhang et al. , Phys. Fluids , vol. 32 (7), 2020, 071702; Li et al. , Phys. Fluids , vol. 32 (5), 2020, 051701).