Abstract

Two dimensional pressure field was acquired at 10 kHz to study the post flutter oscillations of a thin elastic panel placed beneath a Mach 2.5 turbulent boundary layer. The panel was made of aluminum and is secured to the mounting fixture using a collection of rivets, which resulted in a boundary condition that was between both ideally clamped and pinned boundaries. Direct comparison of the mean and unsteady pressure fields were made for the panel executing post flutter oscillations and oscillations away from the flutter boundary. Whereas the mean pressure fields were largely similar during and away from post-flutter oscillations, the unsteady pressure fields showed a significant increase in the pr.m.s. during post flutter oscillations. The spectral content of the pressure oscillations and panel oscillations revealed that the tonal aeroelastic frequency dominate the post flutter oscillations. This tonal frequency was determined to lie at the close vicinity of the (2,1) panel elastic mode. The r.m.s. panel deflection field during post flutter oscillations were also reconstructed from the unsteady pressure fields and the reconstructed panel deflection also corresponded to the (2,1) elastic mode.Further coherence and cross-correlation analyses provided insights into possible mechanisms that control the transition of the panel oscillations away from the flutter boundary. The analyses suggest that the transition away from the flutter boundary is possibly initiated by the decoherence of the organized pressure field during the post flutter region by the turbulent boundary layer.

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