Title: Veer N. Vatsa
1Case 1 Overall Summary(Synthetic Jet in
Quiescent Air)
- Veer N. Vatsa
- NASA Langley Research Center
- Hampton, VA
CFD Validation of Synthetic Jets and Turbulent
Separation Control Workshop March 29-31,
2004 Williamsburg, Virginia
2Outline
- Contributors/codes
- Governing equations/turbulence models
- Grid types/sizes, temporal resolutions
- Cavity modeling
- Initial conditions at slot exit
- Sample of time-averaged results
- Sample of phase-averaged results
- Sample of turbulence results
- Concluding remarks
3Contributors/codes
- ONERA-flu3m structured, compressible 2D laminar
and URANS (SA) and 3D LES - NASA LaRC-tlns3d structured, compressible 2D
URANS, SA SST - POITIERS-saturne unstructured, incompressible 2D
URANS, wall functions, k- e RSM - WARWICK-neat structured, incompressible 2D
URANS, k- e (standard and non-linear) EASM
4Contributors cont.
- UKY-ghost/uncle unstructured, incompressible 2D
and 3D URANS, SST - WASHU-wind structured, compressible 2D URANS,
SA SST, hybrid SST/LES - GWU-ns structured, incompressible 2D 3D,
laminar - NCAT-quasi1d structured, compressible quasi- 1D
2D, laminar
5Summary of grid sizes and time-steps
Grid Size 5K-199K (2D) 528K-1.4M cells
(3D) Time-step 72-17496 steps/period
6Cross-section of Actuator cavity
7Cavity modeling
- Internal cavity modeled diaphragm motion
simulated by transpiration condition - ONERA, NASA LaRC, UKY, WASHU, GWU
- Internal cavity not modeled
- WARWICK top hat sinusoidal profile (power law
b.l.) at slot exit - POITIERS top hat profile at slot exit from LDV
data - Specialized modeling of cavity
- UKY diaphragm velocity form PIV data curve fit,
nonzero negative (suction) mean velocity - WASHU diaphragm pressure iterated for zero net
mass - GWU modified cavity, transpiration condition at
bottom surface - NCAT quasi1D, includes diaphragm motion (unique)
8Schematic of cuts along which results are shown
9Time histories of phase-averaged v-velocityat
orifice (x0, y0.1 mm)
from 1.4 in bound volume
10Time histories of phase-averaged v-velocityat
orifice (x0, y0.1 mm)
from 1.4 in bound volume
11Time histories of phase-averaged v-velocityat
orifice (x0, y0.1 mm)
from 1.4 in bound volume
12Some Observations on v-velocity time history at
slot exit
- Significant differences in PIV and hotwire data
- PIV data deviates from sinusoidal profile in
phase and amplitude - Max. and min. velocities are not 1800 apart
- Most CFD results are approximately sinusoidal at
slot exit and deviate significantly from
experimental data - Simulating flow inside cavity produced larger
differences at slot exit
13Time-averaged centerline (x0) v-velocity
from 1.7 in bound volume
14Time-averaged centerline (x0) v-velocity
from 1.7 in bound volume
15Time-averaged centerline (x0) v-velocity
from 1.7 in bound volume
16Some Observations on time-averaged
v-velocityalong centerline (x0)
- Significant differences in two sets of
experimental data (PIV Hotwire), especially in
the vicinity of slot exit - Significant variation in CFD results
- Laminar computations indicate largest deviation
from the norm - For URANS computations RSM and EASM models
produced large variation compared with SA, SST or
k-e - 3-D modeling of the problem did not necessarily
improve correlation with experimental data
17Time-averaged v-velocity at y0.1 mm
from 1.8 in bound volume
18Time-averaged v-velocity at y0.1 mm
from 1.8 in bound volume
19Time-averaged v-velocity at y0.1 mm
from 1.8 in bound volume
20Time-averaged v-velocity at y1 mm
from 1.9 in bound volume
21Time-averaged v-velocity at y1 mm
from 1.9 in bound volume
22Time-averaged v-velocity at y1 mm
from 1.9 in bound volume
23Time-averaged v-velocity at y4 mm
from 1.11 in bound volume
24Time-averaged v-velocity at y4 mm
from 1.11 in bound volume
25Time-averaged v-velocity at y4 mm
from 1.11 in bound volume
26Jet-width comparisons
from 1.18 in bound volume
27Jet-width comparisons
from 1.18 in bound volume
28Jet-width comparisons
from 1.18 in bound volume
29Some Observations on time-averaged v-velocity and
jet-width
- Significant variation in CFD results and PIV data
near slot exit - Net suction velocity in UKY simulations at slot
exit possibly due to input velocity profile
specification at diaphragm - Agreement of CFD results with PIV data generally
improved away from slot exit, until y4 mm - Large spread in jet-width computed from
v-velocity - Disagreement with PIV data and among CFD
solutions grows with distance from slot exit
30Time-averaged u-velocity at y1 mm
from 1.14 in bound volume
31Time-averaged u-velocity at y1 mm
from 1.14 in bound volume
32Time-averaged u-velocity at y1 mm
from 1.14 in bound volume
33Time-averaged u-velocity at y4 mm
from 1.16 in bound volume
34Time-averaged u-velocity at y4 mm
from 1.16 in bound volume
35Time-averaged u-velocity at y4 mm
from 1.16 in bound volume
36Time-averaged u-velocity at y8 mm
from 1.17 in bound volume
37Time-averaged u-velocity at y8 mm
from 1.17 in bound volume
38Time-averaged u-velocity at y8 mm
from 1.17 in bound volume
39Some Observations on time-averaged
u-velocityprofiles along fixed y-cuts
- Wider spread among CFD results compared with
v-velocities. Agreement with PIV data
deteriorates with distance from slot exit - Incompressible simulations slightly better in
lower speed regions - Greater disparity between laminar and turbulent
simulations - Loss of symmetry along centerline more evident
40Time-histories of v-velocity at x0, y2 mm
from 1.5 in bound volume
41Time-histories of v-velocity at x0, y2 mm
from 1.5 in bound volume
42Time-histories of v-velocity at x0, y2 mm
from 1.5 in bound volume
43Some Observations on time-history of
v-velocityat x0, y2 mm
- Maximum expulsion near 900 phase angle
- Most CFD calculations predict max. expulsion at a
later phase than PIV data (except POITIERS) - Maximum suction near 2250 phase angle
- Good agreement between CFD results in phase
- Spread among CFD results and PIV data smaller for
suction magnitude
44V-velocity contours, phase90
ONERA-flu3m-2d-sa
WASHU-wind-sa
GWU-ns-lam
UKY-ghost-t003(fine)
NASA-tlns3d-sa(baseline)
from 1.96-1.102 in bound volume
45V-velocity contours, phase90
WARWICK-neat-ke
NCAT-quasi1d
POITIERS-saturne-ke0.25f
POITIERS-saturne-rsm0.125c
from 1.96-1.102 in bound volume
46V-velocity contours, phase90
ONERA-flu3m-les
UKY-uncle-3d-sst
GWU-ns-lam (3d)
WASHU-wind-sst/les
from 1.124-1.130 in bound volume
47V-velocity contours, phase225
ONERA-flu3m-2d-sa
WASHU-wind-sa
GWU-ns-lam
from 1.124-1.130 in bound volume
UKY-ghost-t003(fine)
NASA-tlns3d-sa(baseline)
48V-velocity contours, phase225
WARWICK-neat-ke
NCAT-quasi1d
POITIERS-saturne-ke0.25f
POITIERS-saturne-rsm0.125c
from 1.124-1.130 in bound volume
49V-velocity contours, phase225
UKY-uncle-3d-sst
ONERA-flu3m-les
GWU-ns-lam (3d)
WASHU-wind-sst/les
from 1.124-1.130 in bound volume
50Phase-averaged centerline v-velocity, phase90
from 1.31 in bound volume
51Phase-averaged centerline v-velocity, phase90
from 1.31 in bound volume
52Phase-averaged centerline v-velocity, phase90
from 1.31 in bound volume
53Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y2 mm,
phase90
from 1.34 in bound volume
54Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y2 mm,
phase90
from 1.34 in bound volume
55Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y2 mm,
phase90
from 1.34 in bound volume
56Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y4 mm,
phase90
from 1.35 in bound volume
57Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y4 mm,
phase90
from 1.35 in bound volume
58Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y4 mm,
phase90
from 1.35 in bound volume
59Phase-averaged centerline v-velocity, phase225
from 1.49 in bound volume
60Phase-averaged centerline v-velocity, phase225
from 1.49 in bound volume
61Phase-averaged centerline v-velocity, phase225
from 1.49 in bound volume
62Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y2 mm,
phase225
from 1.52 in bound volume
63Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y2 mm,
phase225
from 1.52 in bound volume
64Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y2 mm,
phase225
from 1.52 in bound volume
65Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y4 mm,
phase225
from 1.53 in bound volume
66Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y4 mm,
phase225
from 1.53 in bound volume
67Phase-averaged v-velocity profiles at y4 mm,
phase225
from 1.53 in bound volume
68Some observations on phase-averaged velocities
- Agreement among CFD and exp. data is qualitative
- Expulsion phase (900)
- Large differences among CFD solutions and PIV
data, disagreement increases with distance from
slot - CFD simulations that modeled the cavity indicate
phase discrepancy during expulsion cycle - Biggest differences seen in laminar simulations
(except ONERA) - Suction phase (2250)
- Better agreement between CFD and PIV data near
slot exit, agreement deteriorates further away
from slot - Spread among CFD results smaller compared to
expulsion cycle (except for laminar computations)
69Phase-averaged uv profiles along centerline,
phase0
from 1.67 in bound volume
70Phase-averaged uv profiles along centerline,
phase180
from 1.67 in bound volume
71Phase-averaged uu profiles along centerline,
phase0
from 1.68 in bound volume
72Phase-averaged uu profiles along centerline,
phase180
from 1.68 in bound volume
73Phase-averaged vv profiles along centerline,
phase0
from 1.69 in bound volume
74Phase-averaged vv profiles along centerline,
phase180
from 1.69 in bound volume
75Phase-averaged uv profiles at y1 mm, phase0
from 1.70 in bound volume
76Phase-averaged uv profiles at y1 mm, phase180
from 1.70 in bound volume
77Some observations on turbulence quantities
- Overall agreement among computations and
measurements poor - Cause for such large differences not clear
- Modeling vs. interpretation ?
- Non-dimensionalization ?
- Among available turbulence models, no clear
trends - Turbulence quantities were not available for RSM
and EASM models
78Concluding Remarks
- Significant differences in PIV, Hotwire and LDV
data, especially near slot exit - Significant variation in computational results
from different groups - Effect of grid density/time-step refinement
minimal for a given code - Laminar results most different
- No particular turbulence model distinctly
superior - 3-D simulations did not appear to improve
correlation with exp. data - Cavity modeling/initial conditions
- No clear advantage seen by modeling of diaphragm
motion via transpiration condition vs. initial
condition specification at slot exit (unexpected) - Phase averaged comparisons suffer from difficulty
in matching of phase at slot exit with
experimental data - Mismatch of velocity profiles at slot exit
(phase/amplitude) introduce large errors in the
field - Comparison of turbulence quantities very poor
- Requires re-examination of the process