Abstract

The laminar-turbulent transition of a boundary layer induced by an ejection of jet in the inlet region of a circular pipe was experimentally investigated. The jet was periodically inserted radially from a small hole in the inlet region into the pipe flow. Axial velocity was monitored by a hot-wire anemometer. The difference of properties in laminar-turbulent transition from developed Hagen-Poiseuille flow was examined. Isolated turbulence patches were generated by the jets, and then they propagated downstream. The leading edge of the turbulent patch was definite, whereas its trailing edge was not. This characteristic was similar to that of a turbulent spot in a flat-plate boundary layer. The threshold value of the jet flow rate to generate the turbulent patch was then obtained. The threshold value decreased and saturated finally with the increase in jet duration. The normalized jet duration when the threshold value was saturated increased with the increase in Reynolds number, contrary to the developed region. The normalized threshold flow rate tended to vary with the Reynolds number among three regions. All tendencies were different from those of the developed region. With the increase in jet flow rate beyond the threshold value, the duration of the turbulent patch increased, though the fluctuating velocity within the patch did not increase. The propagation velocities of the leading and trailing edges, the duration and fluctuating velocity within the turbulent patch were almost constant irrespective of the jet ejection frequency.

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