Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow

Results of a computational study are discussed which investigate roughness-induced and geometry-induced (confinement) effects on the steady-state velocity components in 3-D boundary-layer flow over the rotor disc in a rotor–stator flow configuration. It is found that, for the rotor–stator flow inves...

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Main Authors: M. Özkan, P. J. Thomas, A. J. Cooper, S. J. Garrett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19942060.2016.1247297
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spelling doaj-a3780cc058af4b729731e4eb4a72eaa12020-11-25T00:41:57ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEngineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics1994-20601997-003X2017-01-0111114215810.1080/19942060.2016.12472971247297Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flowM. Özkan0P. J. Thomas1A. J. Cooper2S. J. Garrett3University of WarwickUniversity of WarwickUniversity of WarwickUniversity of LeicesterResults of a computational study are discussed which investigate roughness-induced and geometry-induced (confinement) effects on the steady-state velocity components in 3-D boundary-layer flow over the rotor disc in a rotor–stator flow configuration. It is found that, for the rotor–stator flow investigated, the roughness-induced effects are very similar to geometry-induced effects, both in nature and magnitude. The overall aim was to compare these two types of effects with corresponding roughness-induced effects in the von Kármán boundary-layer flow over a disc spinning freely in an unrestricted fluid environment. The research was conducted in the context of a programme investigating surface roughness as a means of laminar flow control for the development of new passive drag-reduction techniques. The goal was to establish whether it was possible unequivocally to distinguish between roughness-induced and geometry-induced effects on the boundary-layer flow above the rotor disc. The results obtained suggest that, for the type of system discussed here, it must be expected to be difficult to distinguish between these effects in experiments. The similarities regarding the nature and magnitude of results obtained from comparing predictions for three different computational modelling approaches indicate the required sensitivity of measurement technologies aiming to resolve the investigated effects in experimental studies.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19942060.2016.1247297laminar flow controldrag reductionrotor–stator flowrotating-disc flowboundary-layer transitionrough walls
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Özkan
P. J. Thomas
A. J. Cooper
S. J. Garrett
spellingShingle M. Özkan
P. J. Thomas
A. J. Cooper
S. J. Garrett
Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics
laminar flow control
drag reduction
rotor–stator flow
rotating-disc flow
boundary-layer transition
rough walls
author_facet M. Özkan
P. J. Thomas
A. J. Cooper
S. J. Garrett
author_sort M. Özkan
title Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
title_short Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
title_full Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
title_fullStr Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
title_sort comparison of the effects of surface roughness and confinement on rotor–stator cavity flow
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics
issn 1994-2060
1997-003X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Results of a computational study are discussed which investigate roughness-induced and geometry-induced (confinement) effects on the steady-state velocity components in 3-D boundary-layer flow over the rotor disc in a rotor–stator flow configuration. It is found that, for the rotor–stator flow investigated, the roughness-induced effects are very similar to geometry-induced effects, both in nature and magnitude. The overall aim was to compare these two types of effects with corresponding roughness-induced effects in the von Kármán boundary-layer flow over a disc spinning freely in an unrestricted fluid environment. The research was conducted in the context of a programme investigating surface roughness as a means of laminar flow control for the development of new passive drag-reduction techniques. The goal was to establish whether it was possible unequivocally to distinguish between roughness-induced and geometry-induced effects on the boundary-layer flow above the rotor disc. The results obtained suggest that, for the type of system discussed here, it must be expected to be difficult to distinguish between these effects in experiments. The similarities regarding the nature and magnitude of results obtained from comparing predictions for three different computational modelling approaches indicate the required sensitivity of measurement technologies aiming to resolve the investigated effects in experimental studies.
topic laminar flow control
drag reduction
rotor–stator flow
rotating-disc flow
boundary-layer transition
rough walls
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19942060.2016.1247297
work_keys_str_mv AT mozkan comparisonoftheeffectsofsurfaceroughnessandconfinementonrotorstatorcavityflow
AT pjthomas comparisonoftheeffectsofsurfaceroughnessandconfinementonrotorstatorcavityflow
AT ajcooper comparisonoftheeffectsofsurfaceroughnessandconfinementonrotorstatorcavityflow
AT sjgarrett comparisonoftheeffectsofsurfaceroughnessandconfinementonrotorstatorcavityflow
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