Abstract

Abstract Volumetric three-component flow measurements were made to investigate localized blowing (injection) as a control strategy for turbulent boundary layers over k-type 2D roughness. The flow measurements were made using particle tracking velocimetry at a Reynolds number of 100,000. The roughness occupied ~ 13% of the boundary layer thickness and consisted of transverse square bars positioned periodically at a pitch to height ratio of 11. Two cases were considered: a baseline case without blowing and a case with blowing through five spanwise jets issuing from the downstream face of the 11th bar. The results highlight the effectiveness of blowing in reducing the size of the recirculation zone and turbulence past the bar. Specifically, the spanwise-averaged flow field for the blowing case shows a 40% reduction in the reattachment length and ~ 25% reduction in the maximum Reynolds shear stress relative to the baseline case. Moreover, visualizations of the vortical structures past the bars for the baseline case display coherent spanwise vortices similar to those observed past isolated 2D bars and backward-facing steps. Blowing disrupts these spanwise vortices and produces new weaker vortical structures with a wall-normal sense of rotation. As such, blowing results in a reduction in the spanwise-averaged spanwise vorticity characteristic of the flow over k-type 2D roughness. The disruption of the spanwise vortices and the reduction in the size of the recirculation zone are likely responsible for the reduction in the Reynolds shear stress and turbulent kinetic energy in the near wake.

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