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Interaction of a vortex ring with a piston vortex

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2002

J. J. ALLEN
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA
B. AUVITY
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA Present address: Laboratoire d'Etudes Aérodynamiques/Centre d'Etudes Aérodynamiques et Thermiques, 43, rue de l'Aérodrome, 86036 Poitiers Cedex, France.

Abstract

Recent studies on vortex ring generation, e.g. Rosenfeld et al. (1998), have highlighted the subtle effect of generation geometry on the final properties of rings. Experimental generation of vortex rings often involves moving a piston through a tube, resulting in a vortex ring being generated at the tube exit. A generation geometry that has been cited as a standard consists of the tube exit mounted flush with a wall, with the piston stroke ending at the tube exit, Glezer (1988). We employ this geometry to investigate the effect of the vortex that forms in front of the advancing piston (piston vortex) on the primary vortex ring that is formed at the tube exit. It is shown that when the piston finishes its stroke flush with the wall, and hence forms an uninterrupted plane, the piston vortex is convected through the primary ring and then ingested into the primary vortex. The ingestion of the piston vortex results in an increased ring impulse and an altered trajectory, when compared to the case when the piston motion finishes inside the tube. As the Reynolds number of the experiments, based on the piston speed and piston diameter, is the order of 3000, transition to turbulence is observed during the self-induced translation phase of the ring motion. Compared to the case when the piston is stopped inside the tube, the vortex ring which has ingested the piston vortex transitions to turbulence at a significantly reduced distance from the orifice exit and suggests the transition map suggested by Glezer (1988) is under question. A secondary instability characterized by vorticity filaments with components in the axial and radial directions, is observed forming on the piston vortex. The structure of the instability appears to be similar to the streamwise vortex filaments that form in the braid regions of shear layers. This instability is subsequently ingested into the primary ring during the translation phase and may act to accelerate the growth of the Tsai–Widnall instability. It is suggested that the origin of the instability is Görtler in nature and the result of the unsteady wall jet nature of the boundary layer separating on the piston face.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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