Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T09:31:07.484Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Stability of the compressible laminar boundary layer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2006

Lester Lees
Affiliation:
Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California
Eli Reshotko
Affiliation:
Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California

Abstract

In previous theoretical treatments of the stability of the compressible laminar boundary layer, the effect of the temperature fluctuations on the viscous (rapidly varying) disturbances is accounted for incompletely. A thorough re-examination of this problem shows that temperature fluctuations have a profound influence on both the inviscid (slowly varying) and viscous disturbances above a Mach number of about 2·0. The present analysis includes the effect of temperature fluctuations on the viscosity and thermal conductivity and also introduces the viscous dissipation term that was dropped in the earlier theoretical treatments.

Some important results of the present study are: (1) the rate of conversion of energy from the mean flow to the disturbance flow through the action of viscosity in the vicinity of the wall increases with Mach number; (2) instead of being nearly constant across the boundary layer, the amplitude of inviscid pressure fluctuations for Mach numbers greater than 3 decreases markedly with distance outward from the plate surface. This behaviour means that the jump in magnitude of the Reynolds stress in the neighbourhood of the critical layer is greatly reduced; (3) at Mach numbers less than about 2, dissipation effects are minor, but they become extremely important at higher Mach number, since for neutral disturbances they must compensate for the generally destabilizing effects of items (1) and (2); (4) the minimum critical Reynolds number for an insulated flat plate boundary layer decreases with increasing Mach number in the range 0 ≤ Me ≤ 3.A full list of symbols is given at the end of this paper.. Since the wave-number varies like 1/M2e when Me [Gt ] 1, the minimum critical Reynolds number is likely to increase sharply at hypersonic speeds.

Numerical examples illustrating the effects of compressibility, including neutral stability characteristics, are obtained and are compared with the experimental results of Laufer & Vrebalovich (1960) at Mach 2·2, and of Demetriades (1960) at Mach 5·8.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1962 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bogdonoff, S. M. 1959 Private communication.
Cheng, S. I. 1953 On the stability of laminar boundary-layer flow. Princeton Univ. Aero. Engng Lab. Rep. no. 211. Also, Quart. Appl. Math, 11, 34650.Google Scholar
Demetriades, A. 1958 An experimental investigation of the stability of the hypersonie laminar boundary layer. GALCIT Hypersonic Res. Project, Memo. no. 43.Google Scholar
Demetriades, A. 1960 An experiment on the stability of the hypersonic laminar boundary layer. J. Fluid Mech. 7, 385.Google Scholar
Dunn, D. W. 1953 On the stability of the laminar boundary layer in a compressible fluid. Thesis, Mass. Inst. Tech.
Dunn, D. W. & Lin, C. C. 1955 On the stability of the laminar boundary layer in a compressible fluid. J. Aero. Sci. 22, 45577.Google Scholar
Holstein, H. 1950 über die aussere und innere Reibungsschicht bei Störungen laminarer Strömungen. Z. angew. Math. Mech. 30, 2549.Google Scholar
Laufer, J. 1959 Private communication.
Laufer, J. & McClellan, R. 1955 Measurements of heat transfer from fine wires in supersonic flow. Jet Prop. Lab. Cal. Inst. Tech. Ext. Publ. no. 315.Google Scholar
Laufer, J. & Vrebalovich, T. 1958 Stability of a supersonic laminar boundary layer on a flat plate. Jet Prop. Lab. Cal. Inst. Tech. Rep. no. 20–116.Google Scholar
Laufer, J. & Vrebalovich, T. 1960 Stability and transition of supersonic laminar boundary layer on an insulated flat plate. J. Fluid Mech. 9, 25799.Google Scholar
Lees, L. 1947 The stability of the laminar boundary layer in a compressible fluid. NACA Rep. no. 876.Google Scholar
Lees, L. & Lin, C. C. 1946 Investigation of the stability of the laminar boundary layer in a compressible fluid. NACA TN no. 1115.Google Scholar
Lees, L. & Reshotko, E. 1960 Stability of the compressible laminar boundary layer. AGARD, NATO, Rep. no. 268.Google Scholar
Lighthill, M. J. 1950 Reflection at a laminar boundary layer of a weak steady disturbance to a supersonic stream neglecting viscosity and heat conduction. Quart. J. Mech. Appl. Math. 3, 30325.Google Scholar
Lin, C. C. 1955 The Theory of Hydrodynamic Stability. Cambridge University Press.
Mack, L. M. 1958 Calculation of the laminar boundary layer on an insulated flat plate by the Klunker-McLean method. Jet Prop. Lab. Cal. Inst. Tech. Prog. Rep. no. 20–352.Google Scholar
Mack, L. M. 1960 Numerical calculation of the stability of the compressible laminar boundary layer. Jet Prop. Lab. Cal. Inst. Tech. Rep. no. 20–122.Google Scholar
Miles, J. W. 1959 On panel flutter in the presence of a boundary layer. J. Aero/Sp. Sci. 26, 8193.Google Scholar
Prandtl, L. 1935 The mechanics of viscous fluids. Article in Durand, W. R. (ed.), Aerodynamic Theory, Vol. III, Div. G. Berlin: Julius Springer.
Reshotko, E. 1960 Stability of the compressible laminar boundary layer. Cal. Inst. Tech. Ph.D. Thesis. Also GALCIT Hypersonic Res. Project, Memo. no. 52.Google Scholar
Schlichting, H. 1935 Amplitudenverteilung und Energiebilanz der kleinen Störungen bei der Plattengrezschicht. Nachr. Ges. Wiss. Göttingen,-Math-Phys. Klasse, 1, 479. (Translated as NACA TM no. 1265, 1950.)Google Scholar
Schubauer, G. B. & Skramstad, H. K. 1948 Laminar boundary-layer oscillations and transition on a flat plate. NACA Rep. no. 909.Google Scholar
Stuart, J. T. 1956 On the effects of the Reynolds stress on hydrodynamic stability. Z. angew. Math. Mech. Sonderheft, 53238.Google Scholar
Tollmien, W. 1947 Asymptotische Integration der Störungsdifferential-gleichung ebener laminarer Strömungen bei hohen Reynoldsschen Zahlen. Z. angew. Math. Mech. 25/27, 3350; 7083.Google Scholar
Van Driest, E. R. 1952 Calculation of the stability of the laminar boundary layer in a compressible fluid on a flat plate with heat transfer. J. Aero. Sci. 19, 80112.Google Scholar