Abstract

The evolution characteristics of the mean skin friction beneath the supersonic turbulent boundary layer that interacts with incident shock waves at Mach 2.25 are analyzed using Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS). The separated and attached boundary layers in the interaction region that respectively correspond to 33.2° and 28° incident shock angles are considered. The mean skin friction recovery rate for the separated boundary layer is much gentler and distinctly less than that for the attached case where the skin friction completes its recovery within one boundary layer thickness. The novel mean skin friction decomposition method for compressible flows proposed by the recent research is applied in the interaction region to investigate the internal evolution characteristics quantitatively. The results reveal that the three decomposition components are distinctly unequal between the two cases. The contributions of the turbulent motions at different scales to the associated term are focused on using empirical mode decomposition technology. It indicates that the outer large-scale structures dominate separation and reattachment regions, while contributions from inner small-scale structures are limited. In contrast, contributions from the outer large-scale structures are dramatically reduced in the attached case, which results in the outer large-scale and inner small-scale motions being of equal importance.

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