Abstract

The wake of a wall-mounted finite prism is numerically studied and characterized with an aspect ratio (height-to-width) of$1$and varying depth ratios (length to width) of between$0.016$and$4$at Reynolds numbers of 50–500. The prism is immersed in a laminar boundary layer. The minimum depth ratio considered here accounts for the special case of a wall-mounted very thin prism (similar to a flat plate), which is used to establish the mechanism and evolution of the wake associated with free-end effects and the shear-layer dynamics in small aspect-ratio prisms. The onset of an unsteady wake behind a very thin prism at a Reynolds number of$200$is characterized by symmetric shedding of hairpin-like vortices. A unique asymmetric wake pattern appears at lower depth ratios starting at a Reynolds number of 250, which transitions to an symmetric wake with increasing depth ratio. The threshold depth ratio for this symmetric transition increases with Reynolds number. The asymmetric wake results from alternate shear-layer peel-off from either side of the prism, which itself is attributed to the out-of-phase shedding of tip vortices at a lower Strouhal number ($St_{sh}/2$) that interact with the detaching side shear layers. Alternate shedding of tip vortices form secondary vortex structures that are fed by the excess vorticity resulting from shear-layer detachment from either side of the prism. Increasing the depth ratio leads to simultaneous shedding of the tip vortices, which restores the commonly observed wake symmetric patterns. Thus, we identify and characterize the formation and interaction mechanisms of symmetric and asymmetric wakes during the transition process with increasing Reynolds number for different depth-ratio prisms.

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