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Published October 2015 | Published
Journal Article Open

Observations of hypervelocity boundary-layer instability

Abstract

A novel optical method is used to measure the high-frequency (up to 3 MHz) density fluctuations that precede transition to turbulence within a laminar boundary layer in a hypervelocity flow. This optical method, focused laser differential interferometry, enables measurements of short-wavelength, high-frequency disturbances that are impossible with conventional instrumentation such as pressure transducers or hot wires. In this work, the T5 reflected-shock tunnel is used to generate flows in air, nitrogen and carbon dioxide with speeds between 3.5 and 5 km s^(−1) (Mach numbers between 4 and 6) over a 5° half-angle cone at zero angle of attack. Simultaneous measurements are made at two locations approximately midway along a generator of the 1-m-long cone. With increasing Reynolds number (unit values were between 2 and 5×10^6 m^(−1)), density fluctuations are observed to grow in amplitude and transition from a single narrow band of frequencies consistent with the Mack or second mode of boundary-layer instability to bursts of large-amplitude and spectrally broad disturbances that appear to be precursors of turbulent spots. Disturbances that are sufficiently small in initial amplitude have a wavepacket-like signature and are observed to grow in amplitude between the upstream and downstream measurement locations. A cross-correlation analysis indicates propagation of wavepackets at speeds close to the edge velocity. The free stream flow created by the shock tunnel and the resulting boundary layer on the cone are computed, accounting for chemical and vibrational non-equilibrium processes. Using this base flow, local linear and parabolized stability (PSE) analyses are carried out and compared with the experimental results. Reasonable agreement is found between measured and predicted most unstable frequencies, with the greatest differences being approximately 15 %. The scaling of the observed frequency with the inverse of boundary-layer thickness and directly with the flow velocity are consistent with the characteristics of Mack's second mode, as well as results of previous researchers on hypersonic boundary layers.

Additional Information

© 2015 Cambridge University Press. Received 19 October 2014; revised 23 July 2015; accepted 18 August 2015; first published online 16 September 2015. The authors thank B. Valiferdowsi and J. Jewell for their assistance in operating and maintaining T5. We are particularly grateful to G. Candler and H. Johnson for generously providing their software and to R. Wagnild for his invaluable help in using these programs. N. Bitter provided key insights into stability theory as well as carried out independent analysis and computations for figures 1 and 11 (the synthetic schlieren images). This work is based in part on the PhD dissertation of the first author Parziale (2013), and was an activity that was part of National Center for Hypersonic Laminar–Turbulent Research, sponsored by the 'Integrated Theoretical, Computational, and Experimental Studies for Transition Estimation and Control' project supported by the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (FA9552-09-1-0341).

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August 22, 2023
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