Abstract
It is difficult to find a valid high-order (of Reynolds number) analytical approximation to the uniform viscous flow past an infinite circular cylinder by applying perturbation techniques. In this study, we show that by accelerating flow past a circular cylinder with taking unsteady Stokes' solution as an initial approximation, higher-order approximation solutions to unsteady Oseen's equation can be obtained by an iteration scheme of perturbation, which exactly satisfy the boundary conditions. As a matter of fact, the nonlinear (convective) term linearized by Oseen's approximation is overweighted especially near the body surface. To eliminate the overweight, a multi-region analysis is proposed in this study to improve analytical unsteady Oseen's solution so as to extend the valid range of Reynolds numbers. In other words, the flow region is hypothetically divided into several annular regions, and the linearized convective term in each region is modified by multiplying with a Carrier's coefficient c (0 < c ≤ 1). The results show that, when the accelerating parameter in the range of 0.5 ≤ a ≤ 4, the maximum effective Reynolds number Reeff of the fourth-order five-region solution is both much larger than that of Stokes' and Oseen's ones. For example, when a = 0.5, Reeff = 22.26 is roughly eight times that of Stokes' solution (Reeff = 2.67), and nine times that of Oseen's solution (Reeff = 2.41). Moreover, when the instantaneous Reynolds number Re(t) is smaller than the Reeff, the flow separation angle and the wake length are both consistent with the numerical results obtained by accurately solving the full Navier-Stokes equations. In addition, the flow properties, including the drag coefficients, streamline patterns, and the pressure coefficients, as well as the vorticity distributions also agree well with the numerical results. This study represents a significant extension of our previous study for unsteady Stokes' equation [Xu et al., Phys. Fluids 35, 033608 (2023)] to unsteady Oseen's equation and its generalization.
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