Abstract

▪ When a fluid enters a rotating circular pipe a swirl boundary layer with thickness of δ̃S appears at the wall and interacts with the axial momentum boundary layer with thickness of δ̃. We investigate the turbulent flow applying Laser-Doppler-Anemometry to measure the circumferential velocity profile at the inlet of a rotating pipe. The measured swirl boundary layer thickness follows a power law taking Reynolds number and flow number into account. A critical combination of Reynolds number, flow number and axial position causes a transition of the swirl boundary layer development in the turbulent regime. At this critical combination, the swirl boundary layer thickness as well as the turbulence intensity increase and the latter yields a self-similarity. The circumferential velocity profile changes to a new presented self-similarity. A method is established to define the transition inlet length, when the transition appears and a stability map for two regimes is given.

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