Drag reduction using wrinkled surfaces in high Reynolds number laminar boundary layer flows
Inspired by the design of the ribbed structure of shark skin, passive drag reduction methods using stream-wise riblet surfaces have previously been developed and tested over a wide range of flow conditions. Such textures aligned in the flow direction have been shown to be able to reduce skin frictio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physics of fluids (1994) 2017-09, Vol.29 (9) |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Inspired by the design of the ribbed structure of shark skin, passive drag reduction
methods using stream-wise riblet surfaces have previously been developed and tested over a
wide range of flow conditions. Such textures aligned in the flow direction have been shown
to be able to reduce skin friction drag by 4%–8%. Here, we explore the effects of periodic
sinusoidal riblet surfaces aligned in the flow direction (also known as a “wrinkled”
texture) on the evolution of a laminar boundary layer flow. Using numerical analysis with
the open source Computational Fluid Dynamics solver OpenFOAM, boundary layer flow over
sinusoidal wrinkled plates with a range of wavelength to plate length ratios
(
λ
/
L
), aspect ratios (
2
A
/
λ
), and inlet velocities are examined. It is shown that in
the laminar boundary layer regime, the riblets are able to retard the viscous flow inside
the grooves creating a cushion of stagnant fluid that the high-speed fluid above can
partially slide over, thus reducing the shear stress inside the grooves and the total
integrated viscous drag force on the plate. Additionally, we explore how the boundary
layer thickness, local average shear stress distribution, and total drag force on the
wrinkled plate vary with the aspect ratio of the riblets as well as the length of the
plate. We show that riblets with an aspect ratio of close to unity lead to the highest
reduction in the total drag, and that because of the interplay between the local stress
distribution on the plate and stream-wise evolution of the boundary layer the plate has to
exceed a critical length to give a net decrease in the total drag force. |
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ISSN: | 1070-6631 1089-7666 |
DOI: | 10.1063/1.4995566 |