Experimental Study of Perforated Plate Wakes Upon Starting Motion

ORAL

Abstract

The flow and drag generated by a perforated plate set in motion up to a formation time of T=8 is studied using a tow-tank. The effect of open area fraction on the vortex dynamics is investigated and found to mediate a slow transition between a solid plate's tight vortex-rollup behavior and a highly perforated plate's weak shear-layer behavior. This change corresponds to suppression of the initial drag peak and subsequent drag undershoot of a solid plate. Paradoxically, this results in a region of time where adding holes increases drag. We use our experimental data to close Inoue's porous plate vortex model by leveraging a modification of small-time vortex dynamical theory introduced by Rott. We show that the results from the closed Inoue model are useful in explaining most of the flow behavior across all perforation levels tested.

*Support was provided in part by the Center for Autonomous Systems and Technologies (CAST) at Caltech.This material is based upon work supported in part by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant No. DGE‐1745301. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

Presenters

  • Scott A Bollt

    • Caltech

Authors

  • Scott A Bollt

    • Caltech
  • Manoochehr M Koochesfahani

    • Michigan State University
  • Morteza Gharib

    • Caltech