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EPSRC Reference: EP/G061637/1
Title: First Grant Scheme: Boundary-layer transition on rotating bodies
Principal Investigator: Garrett, Professor SJ
Other Investigators:
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Department: Mathematics
Organisation: University of Leicester
Scheme: First Grant Scheme
Starts: 28 September 2009 Ends: 27 March 2013 Value (£): 259,969
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Continuum Mechanics Fluid Dynamics
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
No relevance to Underpinning Sectors
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
16 Apr 2009 Engineering Science (Flow) Panel Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
Background: The rotating-disk boundary layer has long been used as a model for swept-wing flow because of the similarity between the basic-flow velocity profiles of the disk and the swept wing. However, continuing developments in spinning projectiles, aerofoils, aeroengines and other industrial applications has led to the need to understand the onset of laminar-turbulent transition of the boundary-layer flows over rotating disks, spheres and cones as objects in their own right.For example, rotating spheres and cones are used as nose cones in aeroengine and spinning projectile applications. Here laminar-turbulent transition within the boundary-layer flow over the nose cones can lead to significant increases in drag. For aeroengine applications this has negative implications for the fuel efficiency through increased noise and energy dissipation, and for projectile applications this has negative implications for control and accurate targeting. Understanding the stability of such boundary-layer flows and developing strategies to maintain laminar flow will lead to modifications in the design of these applications and enable significant cost savings. Furthermore, flows arising from rotating disks are present in types of chemical vapour deposition (CVD) reactors used for depositing thin films of optical and electrical materials on substrates in the electrochemical industry. Such reactors operate by forcing a carrier gas containing the reactive molecules onto the substrate held within a disk-like support placed horizontally in the flow. The gas flow can be considered as a uniform axial flow incident on a rotating disk and it is desirable that the flow close to the substrate be laminar and free from instability to ensure uniform deposition.Research: Experimental observations have noted a distinction between the transition region on slender and non-slender cones. For example, for cones with slender half-angles rotating in still fluid, pairs of counter-rotating Gortler-type vortices are observed. However, as the half-angle is increased beyond 30degs, the results clearly show that the vortices change from pairs of counter-rotating vortices to co-rotating vortices. It is well known that the vortices observed on rotating disks and non-slender cones are in fact co-rotating vortices attributed to an underlying crossflow instability, and so the observed instability for slender cones stems from an inherently different process. The existence of a viscous-mode dominated structure for slender cones which leads to the onset of a centrifugal Gortler instability has been hypothesised. It is this instability that will be studied in the research, with particular emphasis placed on the aerodynamic applications of rotating cones mentioned above.In addition, although the common assumption of an incompressible boundary-layer flow is reasonable for many aeroengine applications, it is not for the high-speed aerodynamic and CVD applications mentioned above. The studies performed so far on such boundary layers, although important in a theoretical context, must be considered as preliminary investigations with regards these applications. This research therefore also aims to study the effects of compressibility and heating on such bodies and the implications for machinery design.
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