Abstract

In this paper, we study the aeroacoustic instability which occurs in a deep axisymmetric cavity in a turbulent pipe flow. This phenomenon is the axisymmetric counterpart of the classical whistling of a rectangular deep cavity subject to a grazing flow. The whistling of such axisymmetric cavity originates from the interaction of the coherent fluctuations of the vorticity at the cavity's opening with one of its trapped azimuthal or radial acoustic modes. We focus here on the situation involving the first pure azimuthal mode, which is trapped in the cavity. As a consequence of the rotational symmetry of the configuration, azimuthal modes are actually pairs of degenerate eigenmodes, or almost degenerate in the presence of small asymmetries. Therefore, the aeroacoustic instabilities exhibit more complex mechanisms than in the case of a rectangular deep cavity. In particular, we show that self-sustained spinning modes induce a symmetry breaking of the mean flow and we will elucidate the details of this phenomenon. To that end, simultaneous acoustic and time-resolved stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements are performed. They reveal that when large-amplitude aeroacoustic waves spin around the cavity, a quasi-steady mean flow starts whirling slowly in the opposite direction to the wave propagation. A linear perturbation analysis around an axisymmetric mean flow confirms the experimental observations: although the incoming pipe flow is not swirling, the hydrodynamic component of the aeroacoustic wave induces such whirling motion of the mean flow because of the forcing from the steady part of the coherent Reynolds stress tensor.

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