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Effects of the separating shear layer on the reattachment flow structure part 2: Reattachment length and wall shear stress

✍ Scribed by E. W. Adams; J. P. Johnston


Publisher
Springer
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
680 KB
Volume
6
Category
Article
ISSN
0723-4864

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✦ Synopsis


Measurements of reattachment length of a separated flow behind a backward-facing step for a range of Reynolds numbers (8000 < Re n < 40,000) and initial boundary-layer thickness (0 < 3/H < 2) were performed with the purpose of explaining the scatter in existing (high quality) data sets and to understand the effect of the initial shear-layer structure on the reattachment zone. The reattachment length for the case of laminar boundary layers upstream of the step were 30% smaller than when the boundary layer upstream of the step was turbulent. Measured values of the mean wall shear stress in the reattachment zone were also measurably affected by the upstream boundary-layer state. The (rms) levels of fluctuating wall stress were not sensitive to boundary-layer state, but rather to b/H, as was the case for the pressure profiles in part 1 (Adams and Johnston 1988).


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Effects of the separating shear layer on
✍ E. W. Adams; J. P. Johnston πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1988 πŸ› Springer 🌐 English βš– 853 KB

The effect of the separating shear-layer thickness and shape on the structure of the flow in the reattachment region of a backward-facing step is examined using wall static-pressure profiles and turbulence data for a range of Reynolds number (800 < Reh, < 40,000) and upstream boundary-layer thicknes