Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2006
The effect of periodic two-dimensional excitation on the development of a turbulent mixing region was studied experimentally. Controlled oscillations of variable ampli- tude and frequency were applied at the initiation of mixing between two parallel air streams. The frequency of forcing was at least an order of magnitude lower than the initial instability frequency of the flow in order to test its effect far downstream. The effect of the velocity difference between the streams was also investigated in this experiment. A typical Reynolds number based on the velocity difference and the momentum thickness of the shear layer was l04.
It was determined that the spreading rate of the mixing layer is sensitive to periodic surging even if the latter is so small that it does not contribute to the initial energy of the fluctuations. Oscillations at very small amplitudes tend to increase the spreading rate of the flow by enhancing the amalgamation of neighbouring eddies, but at higher amplitudes the flow resonates with the imposed oscillation. The resonance region can extend over a significant fraction of the test section depending on the Strouhal number and a dimensionless velocity-difference parameter. The flow in the resonance region consists of a single array of large, quasi-two-dimensional vortex lumps, which do not interact with one another. The exponential shape of the mean-velocity distribution is not affected in this region, but the spreading rate of the flow with increasing distance downstream is inhibited. The Reynolds stress in this region changes sign, indicating that energy is extracted from the turbulence to the mean motion; the intensity of the spanwise fluctuations is also reduced, suggesting that the flow tends to become more two-dimensional.
Amalgamation of large coherent eddies is resumed beyond the resonance region, but the flow is not universally similar. There are many indications suggesting that the large eddies in the turbulent mixing layer at fairly large Re are governed by an inviscid instability.