Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2006
This paper aims to elucidate the structure of the turbulent mixing layers, especially, its dependence on initial disturbances. The mixing layers are produced by setting a woven-wire screen perpendicular to the freestream in the test section of a wind tunnel to obstruct part of the flow. Three kinds of model geometry are treated; these model screens produced mixing layers which may be regarded as the equivalents of the plane mixing layer and of two-dimensional and axisymmetric wakes issuing into ambient streams of higher velocity. The initial disturbances are imposed by installing thin rods of various sizes along the edge of the screen or at the origin of the mixing layer. Flow features are visualized by the smoke-wire method. Statistical quantities are measured by a laser-Doppler velocimeter. In all cases large-scale transverse vortices seem to persist, although comparatively small-scale vortices are superimposed on the flow field in the mixing layer. The mixing layers are in self-preserving state at least up to third-order moments, but the self-preserving state is different in each case. The growth rates of the mixing layer are shown to depend strongly on the initial disturbance imposed.