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      Airfoil Boundary Layer Bubble Separation and Transition in a Surging Stream

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          Abstract

          The effect of high-amplitude harmonic surging on airfoil laminar separation bubbles was investigated theoretically, and experimentally in a dedicated surging-flow wind tunnel. A generalized pressure coefficient was developed that accounts for local static pressure variations due to surging. This generalization, never previously implemented, facilitated direct comparisons between surging and quasi-steady pressure coefficients, and thus unsteady effects could be distinguished from Reynolds number effects. A momentum-integral boundary layer analysis was implemented to determine movement of the bubble separation point, and movement of the transition point was extracted from experimental surface pressure coefficients. The most significant finding was that bubble bursting occurs, counterintuitively, during early imposition of the favorable temporal pressure gradient. This is because the favorable pressure gradient rapidly drives the bubble aft, rendering it unable to reattach. Bursting resulted in large lift and form-drag coefficient oscillations, and failure to implement the generalized pressure coefficient definition resulted in temporal form-drag errors of up to 400 counts.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          25 July 2022
          Article
          2207.12107
          9e4815f8-8395-40a2-93e2-c5e9a6b9f3a6

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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          Custom metadata
          10 pages, 6 figures
          physics.flu-dyn

          Thermal physics & Statistical mechanics
          Thermal physics & Statistical mechanics

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