Abstract

We present large-eddy simulation (LES) of flow past different airfoils with $Re_{c}$, based on the free-stream velocity and airfoil chord length, ranging from $10^{4}$ to $2.1\times 10^{6}$. To avoid the challenging resolution requirements of the near-wall region, we develop a virtual wall model in generalized curvilinear coordinates and incorporate the non-equilibrium effects via proper treatment of the momentum equations. It is demonstrated that the wall model dynamically captures the instantaneous skin-friction vector field on arbitrary curved surfaces at the resolved scale. By combining the present wall model with the stretched-vortex subgrid-scale model, we apply the wall-modelled LES approach to three different airfoil cases, spanning different geometrical parameters, different attack angles and low to high $Re_{c}$. The numerical results are verified with direct numerical simulation (DNS) at low $Re_{c}$, and validated with experiment data at higher $Re_{c}$, including typical aerodynamic properties such as pressure coefficient distributions, velocity components and also more challenging measurements such as skin-friction coefficient and Reynolds stresses. All comparisons show reasonable agreement, providing a measure of validity that enables us to further probe simulation results into aspects of flow physics that are not available from experiments. Two techniques to quantify hitherto unexplored physics of flows past airfoils are employed: one is the construction of the anisotropy invariant map, and the second is skin-friction portraits with emphasis on flow transition and unsteady separation along the airfoil surface. The anisotropy maps for all three $Re_{c}$ cases, show clearly that a portion of the flow field is aligned along the axisymmetric expansion line, corresponding to the turbulent boundary layer log-law behaviour and the appearance of turbulent transition. The instantaneous skin-friction portraits reveal a monotonic shrinking of the near wall structure scale. At $Re_{c}=10^{4}$, the interaction between the primary separation bubble and the secondary separation bubble contributes to turbulent transition, similar to the case of flow past a cylinder. At higher $Re_{c}=10^{5}$, the primary separation breaks into several small separation bubbles. At even higher $Re_{c}=2.1\times 10^{6}$, near the turbulent separation, the skin-friction lines show small-scale reversal flows that are similar to those observed in DNS of the flat plate turbulent separation. A notable feature of turbulent separation in flow past an airfoil is the appearance of turbulence structures and small-scale reversal flows in the spanwise direction due to the vortex shedding behaviour.

Highlights

  • External flow past an isolated airfoil is relevant in the context of a variety of engineering applications, such as micro or unmanned air vehicles, small wind turbines and low-speed aircraft

  • LES of wall-bounded turbulent flows can be classified into wall-resolved large-eddy simulations (WRLES) and wall-modelled large-eddy simulations (WMLES)

  • We have presented results of wall-modelled large-eddy simulations of flow past three different airfoils (NACA0012, NACA0018 and A-airfoil) at Reynolds number varying from Rec = 104 to 2.1 × 106

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Summary

Introduction

External flow past an isolated airfoil is relevant in the context of a variety of engineering applications, such as micro or unmanned air vehicles, small wind turbines and low-speed aircraft Key aerodynamic quantities such as the lift and drag coefficients, of relevance to engineering applications, have been the focus of several experimental investigations (Abbott, Doenhoff & Stivers 1945; Lissaman 1983; Laitone 1997) at different Reynolds numbers (Rec) and angles of attack (AoA). High Reynolds unsteady flow past an airfoil is characterized by boundary layer separation, laminar–turbulent transition, wall-bounded turbulence under pressure gradients and turbulent wake flow Methods to simulate this full three-dimensional (3-D) unsteady flow include: direct numerical simulation (DNS), large-eddy simulation (LES), detached-eddy simulation (DES) and Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes models (RANS). The wall-modelling approach is a tenable solution for LES of high Re wall-bounded turbulent flows

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