Visualization and Transport Analysis of Non-slender Delta Wing Vortices
ORAL
Abstract
The flow physics of non-slender delta wings are complex and relatively poorly understood in comparison with their slender counterparts. A vorticity transport analysis on a low-Reynolds number (O(104)), sharp-edged delta wing, with sweep angle of 50 degrees, showed that the vorticity in the leading-edge vortices was generated primarily near the apex, with convective and diffusive vorticity transport processes governing LEV evolution along the leading edges [Buchholz, Wabick, Manazir, and Snider, APS DFD 2019]. In the present work, we examine a similar delta wing geometry in a wind tunnel at Re = O(105) using volumetric particle tracking velocimetry. A vorticity transport framework is used to characterize leading-edge vortex evolution under these conditions. Whereas the vorticity transport budget, which quantifies various physical mechanisms governing LEV strength, is in essence a reduced order model of the flow, we also investigate these transport mechanisms in the context of flow field modal decomposition. Reynolds number effects are also considered.
*We gratefully acknowledge support of the Air Force Office of Science & Technology through a DURIP grant, number FA9550-20-1-0384.
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Presenters
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Mohammad Elsouht
- The University of Iowa