NASA NACA-TN-2913-1953 On the development of turbulent wakes from vortex streets《涡街湍流尾流的发展》.pdf
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1、._ N 62 54913,. C,.O ;v“ ,NATIONAL ADVISORY C_ITTEE _FOR AERONAUTICSTECHNICAL NOTE 2913ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF TURBULENT WAKESFROM VORTEX STREETSBy Anatol RoshkoCalifornia Institute of TechnologyWashingtonMarch 1953Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license fr
2、om IHS-,-,-Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-In NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICSTECHNICAL NOTE 2913ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF TURBULENT WAKESFROM VORTEX STREETSBy Anatol RoshkoSUMMARYWake development behind circular cylinders at R
3、eynolds numbers from40 to I0,000 was investigated in a low-speed wind tunnel. Standard hot-wire techniques were used to study the velocity fluctuations.The Reynolds number range of periodic vortex shedding is dividedinto two distinct subranges. At R = 40 to IS0, called the stable range,regular vorte
4、x streets are formed and no turbulent motion is developed.The range R = iS0 to 300 is a transition range to a regime called theirregular range, in which turbulent velocity fluctuations accompany theperiodic formation of vortices. The turbulence is initiated by laminar-turbulent transition in the fre
5、e layers which spring from the separationpoints on the cylinder. This transition first occurs in the rangeR = 150 to 300.Spectrum and statistical measurements were made to study the velocityfluctuations. In the stable range the vortices decay by viscous diffusion.In the irregular range the diffusion
6、 is turbulent and the wake becomesfully turbulent in 40 to 50 diameters downstream.It was found that in the stable range the vortex street has a periodicspanwise structure.The dependence of shedding frequency on velocity was successfullyused to measure flow velocity.Measurements in the wake of a rin
7、g showed that an annular vortexstreet is developed.INTRODUCTIONIt is always difficult to determine precisely the date and authorof a discovery or idea. This seems to be the case with the periodicphenomena associated with flow about a cylinder. Although the effectProvided by IHSNot for ResaleNo repro
8、duction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-2 NACATN 2913of wind in producin_ vibrations in wires (aeolian tones) had been knownfor sometime, the first experimental observations are due to Strouhal(reference i) who showedthat the frequency depends on the relative airvelocity and not
9、 the elastic properties of the wires. Soonafter,Rayleigh (1879, references 2 and 3) performed similar experiments. Hisformulation of the Reynolds numberdependencedemonstrates his remarkableinsight into the problem.These earliest observations were concerned with the relationsbetween vibration frequen
10、cy and wind velocity. The periodic nature ofthe wake was discovered later, although Leonardo da Vinci in the fifteenthcentury had already drawn somerather accurate sketches of the vortexformation in the flow behind bluff bodies (reference 4). However,Leonardos drawings show a symmetric row of vortic
11、es in the wake. Thefirst modernpictures showing the alternating arrangement of vorticesin the wake were published by Ahlborn in 1902 (reference 5); his visual-ization techniques have been used extensively since then. The importanceof this phenomenon, now known as the K_rm_ vortex street, was pointed
12、out by Benard (1908, reference 6).f In 1911 Karman gave his famous theory of the vortex street (refer-ence 7), stimulating a widespread and lasting series of investigationsof the subject. For the most part these concerned themselves withl experimental comparisons of real vortex streets with KArmans
13、idealizedmodel, calculations on the effects of various disturbances and configura-tions, and so on. It can hardly be said that any fundamental advance inthe problem has been made since K_rm_s stability papers, in which healso clearly outlined the nature of the phenomenon and the unsolvedproblems. Ou
14、tstanding perhaps is the problem of the periodic vortex-shedding mechanism, for which there is yet no suitable theoreticaltreatment.However, the results of the many vortex-street studies, especiallythe experimental ones, are very useful for further progress in the prob-lem. Attention should be drawn
15、 to the work of Fage and his associates(1927, references 8 to i0), whose experimental investigations were con-ducted at Reynolds numbers well above the ranges examined by most otherinvestigators. Their measurements in the wake close behind a cylinderprovide much useful information about the nature o
16、f the shedding. Morerecently Kovasznay (1949, reference ii) has conducted a hot-wire inves-tigation of the stable vortex street (low Reynolds numbers), to whichfrequent reference will be made.Vortex-street patterns which are stable and well-defined for longdistances downstream actually occur in only
17、 a small range of cylinderReynolds numbers, from about R = 40 to 150, and it is to this rangethat most of the attention has been given. On the other hand, as iswell-known, periodic vortex shedding also occurs at higher ReynoldsProvided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted with
18、out license from IHS-,-,-NACATN 2913 3numbers, up to 105 or more, but the free vortices which movedownstreamare quickly obliterated, by turbulent diffusion, and a turbulent wakeis established.The present interest in the vortex street is due to somequestionsarising from the study of turbulent flow be
19、hind cylinders and grids.Such studies are usually madeat Reynolds numbersfor which periodicvortex shedding from the cylinders or grid rods might occur. However,the measurementsare always taken downstreamfar enough to insure thatthe periodic velocity fluctuations are obliterated and the flow is com-p
20、letely turbulent. There are several important consequencesof thislimitation.First, the energy of the velocity fluctuations is quite low comparedwith the energy near the cylinder, and especially low comparedwith thedissipation represented by the form drag. In attaining the developeddownstreamstate th
21、ere is evidently not only a rapid redistribution ofenergy amongthe spectral componentsbut also a large dissipation.Second, the theories which describe these downstreamstages do not relatethe flow to the initial conditions except very loosely in terms ofdimensionless parameters, and it is usually nec
22、essary to determine anorigin empirically (e.g., mixing-length theory or similarity theories).On the other hand, there is evidence that somefeatures are perma-nent, so that they must be determined near the beginning of the motion.One such feature is the low-wave-numberend of the spectrum which (inthe
23、 theory of homogeneous turbulence) is invariant.Another is the random element. It has been pointed out by Dryden(references 12 and 13) that in the early stages of the decay of isotropicturbulence behind grids the bulk of the turbulent energy lies in aspectral range which is well approximated by the
24、simple functionA characteristic of certain random processes. Liepmann (refer-1 + B2n 2ence 14) has suggested that such a random process may be found in theshedding of vortices fram the grids.In short, there has been no description, other than very qualita-tive, of the downstream development of wakes
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