On the starting vortex generated by a translating and rotating flat plate
- Creators
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Pullin, D. I.
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Sader, John E.
Abstract
We consider the trailing-edge vortex produced in an inviscid fluid by the start-up motion of a two-dimensional flat plate. A general starting motion is studied that includes the initial angle-of-attack of the plate (which may be zero), individual time power laws for plate translational and rotational speeds and the pivot position for plate rotation. A vortex-sheet representation for a start-up separated flow at the trailing edge is developed whose time-wise evolution is described by a Birkhoff–Rott equation coupled to an appropriate Kutta condition. This description includes convection by the outer flow, rotation and vortex-image self-induction. It admits a power-law similarity solution for the (small-time) primitive vortex, leading to an equation set where each term carries its own time-wise power-law factor. A set of four general plate motions is defined. Dominant-balance analysis of this set leads to discovery of three distinct start-up vortex-structure types that form the basis for all vortex motion. The properties of each type are developed in detail for some special cases. Numerical and analytical solutions are described and transition between solution types is discussed. Singular and degenerate vortex behaviour is discovered which may be due to the absence of fluid viscosity. An interesting case is start-up motion with zero initial angle of attack coupled to power-law plate rotation for which time-series examples are given that can be compared to high Reynolds number viscous flows.
Additional Information
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by Cambridge University Press. Received 21 April 2020; revised 22 July 2020; accepted 8 September 2020. The authors thank T. Colonius and T. Leonard for stimulating discussion. J.E.S. acknowledges support from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Exciton Science (CE170100026) and the Australian Research Council grants scheme.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 106839
- DOI
- 10.1017/jfm.2020.762
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20201130-084522897
- Australian Research Council
- CE170100026
- Created
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2020-12-02Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- GALCIT