Effect of Swept Shockwave Boundary-Layer Interaction Strength on Surface Skin Friction

Abstract

This investigation examines the flowfield topology beneath the single fin-generated shockwave boundary-layer interaction as a function of shock interaction strength and incoming boundary-layer thickness. A systematic application of oil film interferometry produced an experimental reconstruction of global skin friction maps for various Mach number and fin angle combinations. To determine the effect of boundary-layer thickness, data from the current study were compared against existing experimental data sets with thinner incoming boundary layers. Results for identically matching flow/geometric conditions show a good agreement between trends seen across the conical region of the interaction and exhibit skin friction coefficient peaks in the same position. Cases corresponding to a relatively thicker boundary layer showed higher skin friction coefficient values along the interaction periphery and upstream regions. An angular scaling was applied to align the inviscid shocks of data sets that matched interaction strength, and the results show similar behavior. The peak skin friction coefficient shows a monotonic increase with increasing shock strength. Conversely, the upstream normalized peak skin friction coefficient depends on boundary-layer thickness and shock strength. These findings indicate that boundary-layer effects are limited to the interaction periphery, whereas viscous effects driven by shockwave–boundary-layer interactions dominate the interior region.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Apr 01, 2023
Source ID
10.2514/1.j062111

Entities

People

  • Andrew Baldwin
  • Farrukh S. Alvi
  • Jonathan W. Naughton
  • Lee Mears
  • Rajan Kumar

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Florida Center for Advanced Aero Propulsion
  • University of Wyoming

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Dynamics.