Abstract

We investigate by direct numerical simulation the active control of laminar-turbulent transition in a hypersonic flat-plate boundary layer at a freestream Mach number of 5.86. The control mechanism is a synthetic jet. Based upon the linear stability theory of Mack, in hypersonic flow the important path to transition involves a high-frequency, second-mode fundamental resonance. Through systematic investigation, we reveal that the forcing the boundary layer with a synthetic jet at appropriate combinations of amplitude and frequency suppresses the second mode and delays transition. To gain physical insights into the major control mechanism, we employ the momentum potential theory (MPT) to analyze the flows with and without control. Essentially, the underlying control mechanism relies on an intriguing effect of the synthetic jet via generating the outward radiated wave structures, which are identified to split the upstream acoustic and vortical components. The splitting treatment presents the second-mode energy to drop sharply after the flow passes through the synthetic jet slot. The MPT source-term analysis reveals that the significantly suppressed near-wall source terms are responsible for suppressing the second mode downstream. Compared with the vortical and thermal source terms, the acoustic source term is found to be suppressed most. The kinetic budget analysis further reveals that the splitting treatment is related to the non-parallel effect and the nonlinear interaction.

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