Abstract

In this paper, suction and injection effects are investigated theoretically on the structure of the lower branch neutral stability modes of three‐dimensional small disturbances imposed on the compressible boundary layer flow due to a rotating disk. In a recent study [1], it was demonstrated that the short‐wavelength stationary/nonstationary compressible crossflow vortex modes at sufficiently high Reynolds numbers with reasonably small scaled frequencies can be described by an asymptotic expansion procedure as set up in [2] for the incompressible stationary modes, which rigorously takes into account the nonparallel effects. Employing this rational asymptotic technique, it is shown here that the wavenumber and the orientation of the compressible lower branch modes are governed by an eigenrelation that is under the strong influence of a suction/injection parameter , which, when set to zero, the relation turns out to be the one obtained previously by Turkyilmazoglu [1] for zero‐suction compressible modes.The boundary layer growth contributes in the way of destabilizing all the modes, in particular for the compressible modes, though the wall cooling in the case of suction and the wall insulation and heating in the case of injection are found to persist to the destabilization for the modes in the vicinity of the stationary mode. From a linear stability analysis point of view, suction is found to be stabilizing, whereas injection enhances the instability as compared to the no suction through the surface of the disk. In both cases, positive frequency waves are found to be highly destabilized as compared to the waves having negative frequencies. The findings of the work are also fully supported after a comparison between the numerical results obtained from directly solving the linearized compressible system with a usual parallel flow approximation and the asymptotic compressible data obtained at a high Reynolds number.

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