Abstract
Passive flow control devices, such as vortex generators (VGs), can effectively modulate the turbulent boundary layer flow near regions of adverse pressure gradients, but the interactions between the salient flow structures produced by VGs and those of the separated flow are not fully understood. In this study, a spatially evolving turbulent boundary layer interacting with a wall-mounted cube ahead of a backward-facing ramp is investigated using wall-resolved large-eddy simulations for a Reynolds number of 19,600, based on the inlet boundary layer thickness and freestream velocity. Different cube configurations are examined to isolate the effects of cube height and streamwise position. The large counter-rotating flow produced by the larger cubes generated more turbulent kinetic energy, thereby resulting in smaller separated regions over the ramp. Although significantly lower levels of turbulent kinetic energy dissipation than production are observed in the outer flow regions of the horseshoe vortex and in the induced counter-rotating flow, the spatial distribution of dissipation is similar to that of the turbulent kinetic energy. When the upstream position of an isolated single cube, relative to the leading ramp edge, is more than three cube heights, the streamwise decay of the counter-rotating flow results in lower levels of turbulent kinetic energy.
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