Summary
Shock-wave turbulent boundary layer interaction (STBLI) observed in high-speed aerospace applications shows the presence of complex flow phenomena that are unsteady, nonlinear, multi-physics, and multi-scale in nature. These phenomena include boundary layer thickening, shock dynamics, shock-induced separation/reattachment, intense thermo-mechanical loading, temperature effects, and low-frequency unsteadiness. In aerospace applications, these complex flow phenomena can cause aircraft buffeting, structural damage, engine unstart/surge, or complete loss of control of the flight vehicle, which led to many accidents in early attempts at supersonic flight. Therefore, the prediction of STBLI in an accurate manner is critical for newer and/or improved designs of such applications. The focus of this research effort is on the development and assessment of modeling approaches for large-eddy simulation (LES) of STBLI, which can be used for predictive simulations. A particular focus is on establishing LES capabilities to capture the temperature and three-dimensional effects.
Support
N/A
Test Cases
- Corner Compression Ramp
- Swept Compression Ramp
Computational Approaches
The rhoCentralFoam solver of the OpenFOAM framework (www.openfoam.com) is being used in this study. It is a density-based compressible flow solver for shock-laden high-speed flows. The solver has been extended to include different types of subgrid models and higher-order spatial interpolation and time integration schemes.
Publications
- E. Durant, R. Ranjan, and K. Sreenivas, “Study of Wall Temperature Effects on the Dynamics of Swept Shock-Wave Turbulent Boundary Layer Interactions”, AIAA-2024-3694, 2024.
- E. Durant, R. Ranjan, and K. Sreenivas, “Study of Wall Temperature Effects on Shock-Wave Turbulent Boundary Layer Interaction using Large Eddy Simulations“, AIAA-2024-2737, 2024.
- E. Durant, R. Ranjan, and K. Sreenivas, “Investigation of Wall Temperature Effects on Shock-Wave Turbulent Boundary Layer Interaction in a Compression Ramp using Large-Eddy Simulations“, Bulletin of the American Physical Society, 67, 2022.