Abstract

Torque measurements have been made on rotating three-dimensional bluff bodies in a cylindrical container from start-up to mean flow steady state. The flow is observed to pass through three distinct temporal regimes in the transient process. These regimes include a build-up period where the torque remains approximately constant, a decay period where the torque decreases, and a mean steady state where the mean torque remains at a constant level. Effects of body geometry, rotation rate, acceleration rate, and fluid height in the tank are quantified. The torque coefficient during the build-up and mean steady-state regimes is shown to be a function of Reynolds number and body geometry. A time scale marking the beginning of the decay period is presented in terms of the problem parameters. Over the range of parameters studied, the build-up, decay, and mean steady-state regimes are completely specified by the Reynolds number, geometric parameters, and decay time scale.

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