Litcius/Paper detail

Scaling for steady and traveling shock wave/turbulent boundary layer interactions

Patrice S. Touré, Erich Schülein

2020Experiments in Fluids11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Shock-wave/boundary-layer interactions (SW–BLIs) play an important role in a wide range of transonic, supersonic and hypersonic applications. Fundamental studies on stationary interactions have been conducted extensively during the last 60 years. However, unsteady SWBLIs with traveling shock fronts have been little studied on canonical geometries. In the present experimental investigation, the influence of a uniformly moving impinging shock on the separated SWBLI flow is analyzed, with a freestream Mach number of 3 and a traveling Mach number in upstream direction of 0.5. To evaluate this effect, stationary reference SWBLIs have been investigated in a wide ranging study. A scaling method from the literature has been enhanced to drastically reduce the data scattering using a new approach accounting for the Reynolds number influence. The results gathered from the traveling interactions were within the spread of reference data, considering the true shock-wave Mach number of 3.5. The validity of the modified scaling approach to describe the interaction length in cases with steady and traveling shock-wave/turbulent-boundary-layer interactions is discussed. Graphic abstract

Topics & Concepts

Mach numberFreestreamSupersonic speedBoundary layerShock waveMechanicsTransonicShock (circulatory)Hypersonic speedPhysicsOblique shockMach waveScalingTurbulenceReynolds numberBow shock (aerodynamics)Moving shockClassical mechanicsGeometryMathematicsAerodynamicsMedicineInternal medicineComputational Fluid Dynamics and AerodynamicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsAerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet Flows