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The vortex generator is a simple device to induce streamwise vortex for flow separation control, thus reducing the pressure-difference drag. The fundamental characteristics of vortex generators and the corresponding parameter influence are first introduced. Then the applications of vortex generators in various fields for flow separation control and heat transfer enhancement are discussed. Note that vortex generators have been actually applied in a few industrial fields, such as modern passenger aircraft. This shows the advantages of vortex generators, since most other control devices are still at the lab-investigation stage.
Biological flow control techniques are derived from nature. It is expected that we can learn from animals and plants to copy or mimic these features to improve the performance of man-made systems. The techniques that are specifically introduced here include hairy coating, leading-edge tubercles, riblet, and cactus-shape modification. Hairy coating can adapt to flow, and thus reduce the drag coefficient of bluff bodies while increasing the lift coefficient of airfoils. Leading-edge tubercles can induce a streamwise vortex from each protuberance to enhance momentum mixing for the separated flow. Surface riblets can reduce the momentum exchange properties of the streamwise vortices, leading to a friction drag reduction of up to 10%. The cactus-shape modification may decrease the size of the wake vortices and the strength of their interaction, thus reducing the lift fluctuation and vortex-induced vibration. It is indicated that biomimetic techniques are easy to mplement with high control effectiveness, and thus show great potential in engineering applications.
This new edition explains how vibrations can be used in a broad spectrum of applications and how to meet the challenges faced by engineers and system designers. The text integrates linear and nonlinear systems, and covers the time domain and the frequency domain, responses to harmonic and transient excitations, and discrete and continuous system models. It focuses on modeling, analysis, prediction, and measurement to provide a complete understanding of the underlying physical vibratory phenomena and their relevance for engineering design. Knowledge is put into practice through numerous examples with real-world applications in a range of disciplines, detailed design guidelines applicable to various vibratory systems, and over forty online interactive graphics which provide a visual summary of system behaviors and enable students to carry out their own parametric studies. Some thirteen new tables act as a quick reference for self-study, detailing key characteristics of physical systems and summarizing important results. This is an essential text for undergraduate and graduate courses in vibration analysis, and a valuable reference for practicing engineers.
Chapter 6 presents a discussion of instabilities in coordinate systems other than Cartesian. In this context, the Taylor problem, Görtler vortices, pipe flow, the rotating disk problem, the trailing vortex and the round jet are all presented. In each case the linearized disturbance equations are derived.
The instability of geophysical flows are covered in Chapter 7. From the class of geophysical flows, there are three classes that are distinct and that illustrate the salient properties when viewed from the basis of perturbations. These cases include the effects of density variations and rotation. The cases considered in this chapter are stratified flow, rotation (Rossby waves) and the Ekman layer.
Chapter 4 addresses the important topic of spatial instability for spatially evolving flows, such as shear layers, jets and wakes. The chapter starts out with a derivation of Gaster’s transformation that allows spatial growth rates to be computed from temporal growth rates. The chapter also presents a dicussion of absolute and convective instabilites, and of wavepackets. It concludes with a discussion of dicrete and continuous spectra.
Chapter 8 addresses the intial value problem, x, where the effect of initial conditions are sought within the linear disturbance regime. Laplace transforms, moving coordinates and numerical approaches are all discussed. Examples of the latter include channel flows and the Blasius boundary layer. The chapter concludes with an in-depth discussion of optimizing the initial conditions for subcritical Reynolds numbers to obtain the maximum energy as a function of time. The concept of algebraically instability is discussed within this context, such that when the normalized energy density is greater than one, the flow is said to be algebraically unstable.
Chapter 13 addresses issues associated with experimental techniques for investigating hydrodynamic instabilties. These issues include the experimental facility, model configuration and instrumentation, all of which impact our understanding of hydrodynamic instabilities.
Chapter 12 summarizes techniques of flow control and optimization. The reader is introduced into both passive and active flow control. Techniques such as flexible boundaries, wave induced forcing, feed-forward and feedback control and optimal control theory are all discussed in some detail.
Chapter 1 introduces the basic concepts of hydrodynamic stability theory. The chapter begins with a discussion of the classical experiments of Reynolds, and moves the reader quickly through other examples of instability found in nature. The basic equations of motion and their linearization are then introduced, which sets the up the foundation for the rest of the book.
Chapter 11 introduces the reader to the world of direct numerical simulations. Temporal and spatial formulations are covered along with boundary and initial conditions. Time-marching methods and spatial discretization methods are also discussed. A variety of applications are then presented.
Chapter 5 examines the role of compressibility on the instability of boundary layers and mixing layers. For the compressible mixing layer, a thorough discussion of the mean flow, compressible Rayleigh equation and neutral stability curves is presented. In the discussion of invisicd distrubances, the compressible vortex sheet is also discussed. For the compressible boundary layer, the viscous stability equations are derived, followed by the neutral stability boundaries.