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Width effects in transonic flow over a rectangular cavity

AIAA Journal

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

A previous experiment by the present authors studied the flow over a finite-width rectangular cavity at freestream Mach numbers 1.5–2.5. In addition, this investigation considered the influence of three-dimensional geometry that is not replicated by simplified cavities that extend across the entire wind-tunnel test section. The latter configurations have the attraction of easy optical access into the depths of the cavity, but they do not reproduce effects upon the turbulent structures and acoustic modes due to the length-to-width ratio, which is becoming recognized as an important parameter describing the nature of the flow within narrower cavities.

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Fluid-structure interactions in compressible cavity flows

Physics of Fluids

Wagner, Justin W.; Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Hunter, Patrick H.; Spillers, Russell W.; Henfling, John F.; Mayes, R.L.

Experiments were performed to understand the complex fluid-structure interactions that occur during aircraft internal store carriage. A cylindrical store was installed in a rectangular cavity having a length-to-depth ratio of 3.33 and a length-to-width ratio of 1. The Mach number ranged from 0.6 to 2.5 and the incoming boundary layer was turbulent. Fast-response pressure measurements provided aeroacoustic loading in the cavity, while triaxial accelerometers provided simultaneous store response. Despite occupying only 6% of the cavity volume, the store significantly altered the cavity acoustics. The store responded to the cavity flow at its natural structural frequencies, and it exhibited a directionally dependent response to cavity resonance. Specifically, cavity tones excited the store in the streamwise and wall-normal directions consistently, whereas a spanwise response was observed only occasionally. The streamwise and wall-normal responses were attributed to the longitudinal pressure waves and shear layer vortices known to occur during cavity resonance. Although the spanwise response to cavity tones was limited, broadband pressure fluctuations resulted in significant spanwise accelerations at store natural frequencies. The largest vibrations occurred when a cavity tone matched a structural natural frequency, although energy was transferred more efficiently to natural frequencies having predominantly streamwise and wall-normal motions.

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Mitigation of wind tunnel wall interactions in subsonic cavity flows

Experiments in Fluids

Wagner, Justin W.; Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

The flow over an open aircraft bay is often represented in a wind tunnel with a cavity. In flight, this flow is unconfined, though in experiments, the cavity is surrounded by wind tunnel walls. If untreated, wind tunnel wall effects can lead to significant distortions of cavity acoustics in subsonic flows. To understand and mitigate these cavity–tunnel interactions, a parametric approach was taken for flow over an L/D = 7 cavity at Mach numbers 0.6–0.8. With solid tunnel walls, a dominant cavity tone was observed, likely due to an interaction with a tunnel duct mode. An acoustic liner opposite the cavity decreased the amplitude of the dominant mode and its harmonics, a result observed by previous researchers. Acoustic dampeners were also placed in the tunnel sidewalls, which further decreased the dominant mode amplitudes and peak amplitudes associated with nonlinear interactions between cavity modes. This indicates that cavity resonance can be altered by tunnel sidewalls and that spanwise coupling should be addressed when conducting subsonic cavity experiments. Though mechanisms for dominant modes and nonlinear interactions likely exist in unconfined cavity flows, these effects can be amplified by the wind tunnel walls.

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Supersonic flow over a finite-width rectangular cavity

AIAA Journal

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Pruett, Brian O.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.

Two-component and stereoscopic particle image velocimetry measurements have been acquired in the streamwise plane for supersonic flow over a rectangular cavity of variable width, peering over the sidewall lip to view the depths of the cavity. The data reveal the turbulent shear layer over the cavity and the recirculation region within it. The mean position of the recirculation region was found to be a function of the length-to-width ratio of the cavity, as was the turbulence intensity within both the shear layer and the recirculation region. Compressibility effects were observed in which turbulence levels dropped, and the shear layer thickness decreased as the Mach number was raised from 1.5 to 2.0 and 2.5. Supplemental measurements in the crossplane and the planform view suggest that zones of high turbulence were affixed to each sidewall centered on the cavity lip, with a strip of turbulence stretched out across the cavity shear layer for which the intensity was a function of the length-to-width ratio. These sidewall features are attributed to spillage, which is greatly reduced for the narrowest cavity. Such effects cannot be found in experiments lacking finite spanwise extent.

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Modernization of Sandia’s hypersonic wind tunnel

53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Beresh, Steven J.; Casper, Katya M.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

Sandia’s Hypersonic Wind Tunnel (HWT) became operational in 1962, providing a test capability for the nation’s nuclear weapons complex. The first modernization program was completed in 1977. A blowdown facility with a 0.46-m diameter test section, the HWT operates at Mach 5, 8, and 14 with stagnation pressures to 21 MPa and temperatures to 1400K. Minimal further alteration to the facility occurred until 2008, but in recent years the HWT has received considerable investment to ensure its viability for at least the next 25 years. This has included reconditioning of the vacuum spheres, replacement of the high-pressure air tanks for Mach 5, new compressors to provide the high-pressure air, upgrades to the cryogenic nitrogen source for Mach 8 and 14, an efficient high-pressure water cooling system for the nozzle throats, and refurbishment of the electric-resistance heaters. The HWT is now returning to operation following the largest of the modernization projects, in which the old variable transformer for the 3-MW electrical system powering the heaters was replaced with a silicon-controlled rectifier power system. The final planned upgrade is a complete redesign of the control console and much of the gas-handling equipment.

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Complex geometry effects on subsonic cavity flows

53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Casper, Katya M.; Wagner, Justin W.; Beresh, Steven J.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

The flow over aircraft bays are often represented using rectangular cavities; however, this simplification neglects many features of the actual flight geometry which could affect the unsteady pressure field and resulting loading in the bay. To address this shortcoming, a complex cavity geometry was developed to incorporate more realistic aircraft-bay features including shaped inlets, internal cavity variations, and doors. A parametric study of these features was conducted at subsonic Mach numbers. Increased higher frequency content and higher-amplitude fluctuations were found in the complex geometry that could produce severe loading conditions for stores carried within the bays. High-frequency content was generated by features that constricted the flow such as leading edge overhangs, internal cavity variations, and the presence of closed doors. Also, the Rossiter modes of the complex configurations were usually shifted in frequency from the simple rectangular cavity, and many modes had much higher amplitudes. Broadband frequency components measured at the aft wall of the complex cavities were also significantly higher than in the rectangular geometry. These changes highlight the need to consider complex geometric effects when predicting the flight loading of aircraft bays.

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Temporal evolution of turbulent eddies in a compressible jet in crossflow measured using pulse-burst PIV

45th AIAA Fluid Dynamics Conference

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

sPulse-burst PIV has been employed to acquire time-resolved data at 25 kHz of a supersonic jet exhausting into a subsonic compressible crossflow. Data were acquired along the windward boundary of the jet mixing layer and can be used to identify the turbulent eddies as they convect downstream in the far-field of the interaction. Eddies were found to have a tendency to occur in closely-spaced counter-rotating pairs and are routinely observed in the PIV movies, but the variable orientation of these pairs makes them difficult to detect statistically. Correlated counter-rotating vortices are more strongly observed to pass by at a spacing about three times the separation between paired vortices, both leading and trailing the reference eddy. This indicates the paired nature of the turbulent eddies and the tendency for these pairs to convect through the field of view at repeatable spacings. Velocity spectra reveal a peak at a frequency consistent with this larger spacing between shear-layer vortices rotating with identical sign. The spatial scale of these vortices appears similar to previous observations of compressible jets in crossflow.

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Pulse-burst PIV in a high-speed wind tunnel

53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Beresh, Steven J.; Kearney, S.P.; Wagner, Justin W.; Guildenbecher, Daniel R.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.; Jiang, Naibo; Slipchenko, Mikhail N.; Mance, Jason; Roy, Sukesh

Time-resolved particle image velocimetry (TR-PIV) has been achieved in a high-speed wind tunnel, providing velocity field movies of compressible turbulence events. The requirements of high-speed flows demand greater energy at faster pulse rates than possible with the TR-PIV systems developed for low-speed flows. This has been realized using a pulse-burst laser to obtain movies at up to 50 kHz with higher speeds possible at the cost of spatial resolution. The constraints imposed by use of a pulse-burst laser are a limited burst duration of 10.2 ms and a low duty cycle for data acquisition. Pulse-burst PIV has been demonstrated in a supersonic jet exhausting into a transonic crossflow and in transonic flow over a rectangular cavity. The velocity field sequences reveal the passage of turbulent structures and can be used to find velocity power spectra at every point in the field, providing spatial distributions of acoustic modes. The present work represents the first use of TR-PIV in a high-speed ground test facility.

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Relationship between acoustic tones and flow structure in transonic cavity flow

45th AIAA Fluid Dynamics Conference

Wagner, Justin W.; Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Arunajatesan, Srinivasan; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

Particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements quantified the coherent structure of acoustic tones in a Mach 0.91 cavity flow. Stereoscopic PIV measurements were performed at 10-Hz and two-component, time-resolved data were obtained using a pulse-burst laser. The cavity had a square planform, a length-to-depth ratio of five, and an incoming turbulent boundary layer. Simultaneous fast-response pressure signals were bandpass filtered about each cavity tone frequency. The 10-Hz PIV data were then phase-averaged according to the bandpassed pressures to reveal the flow structure associated with the resonant tones. The first Rossiter mode was associated with large scale oscillations in the shear layer, while the second and third modes contained organized structures consistent with convecting vortical disturbances. The spatial wavelengths of the cavity tones, based on the vertical coherent velocity fields, were less than those predicted by the Rossiter relation. With increasing streamwise distance the spacing between structures increased and approached the predicted Rossiter value at the aft-end of the cavity. Moreover, the coherent structures appeared to rise vertically with downstream propagation. The time-resolved PIV data were bandpass filtered about the cavity tone frequencies to reveal flow structure. The resulting spacing between disturbances was similar to that in the phase-averaged flowfields.

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Response of a store with tunable natural frequencies in compressible cavity flow

53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Wagner, Justin W.; Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Hunter, Patrick H.; Spillers, Russell W.; Henfling, John F.

Fluid-structure interactions that occur during aircraft internal store carriage were experimentally explored at Mach 0.94 and 1.47 using a generic, aerodynamic store installed in a rectangular cavity having a length-to-depth ratio of 7. Similar to previous studies using a cylindrical store, the aerodynamic store responded to the cavity flow at its natural structural frequencies, and it exhibited a directionally dependent response to cavity resonance. Cavity tones excited the store in the streamwise and wall-normal directions consistently, whereas the spanwise response was much more limited. The store had interchangeable components to vary its natural frequencies by about 10 - 300 Hz. By tuning natural frequencies, mode-matched cases were explored where a prominent cavity tone frequency matched a structural natural frequency of the store. Mode matching produced substantial increases in store vibrations, though the response of the store continued to scale linearly with the dynamic pressure or loading in the bay. Near mode matching frequencies, the response of the store was quite sensitive as changes in cavity tone frequencies of 1% altered store vibrations by as much as a factor of two.

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Pressure fluctuations beneath instability wavepackets and turbulent spots in a hypersonic boundary layer

Journal of Fluid Mechanics

Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Schneider, Steven P.

To investigate the pressure-fluctuation field beneath turbulent spots in a hypersonic boundary layer, a study was conducted on the nozzle wall of the Boeing/AFOSR Mach-6 Quiet Tunnel. Controlled disturbances were created by pulsed-glow perturbations based on the electrical breakdown of air. Under quiet-flow conditions, the nozzle-wall boundary layer remains laminar and grows very thick over the long nozzle length. This allows the development of large disturbances that can be well-resolved with high-frequency pressure transducers. A disturbance first grows into a second-mode instability wavepacket that is concentrated near its own centreline. Weaker disturbances are seen spreading from the centre. The waves grow and become nonlinear before breaking down to turbulence. The breakdown begins in the core of the packets where the wave amplitudes are largest. Second-mode waves are still evident in front of and behind the breakdown point and can be seen propagating in the spanwise direction. The turbulent core grows downstream, resulting in a spot with a classical arrowhead shape. Behind the spot, a low-pressure calmed region develops. However, the spot is not merely a localized patch of turbulence; instability waves remain an integral part. Limited measurements of naturally occurring disturbances show many similar characteristics. From the controlled disturbance measurements, the convection velocity, spanwise spreading angle, and typical pressure-fluctuation field were obtained.

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Results 126–150 of 265
Results 126–150 of 265