Dynamics and bifurcations of laminar annular swirling and non-swirling jets

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2022-07-25

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Abstract

This paper presents bifurcation analyses characterising the nonlinear dynamics of fully developed laminar annular jets with respect to the centrebody diameter, Reynolds number, and swirl ratio. Similar flows appear in numerous applications and feature a vibrant range of topological and dynamical characteristics associated with phenomena including shear layer separation and vortex breakdown. Our results begin by describing the non-monotonic evolution of the axisymmetric jet's steady topology under varying. In accord with earlier reports, the jet progresses through a sequence of wake, breakdown and wall jet regimes in a qualitatively similar manner across a wide span of and values. In the wake regime, the non-swirling jet bifurcates to a plane-symmetric, but not axisymmetric, steady flow pattern beyond a -dependent critical value. With further increase in, the steady non-swirling jet destabilises subsequently via multiple distinct Hopf bifurcations. Introducing 0$]]> to the jet also induces unsteadiness by twisting the singly azimuthally periodic asymmetric wake structure and causing it to precess periodically in time about the central axis. Intermediate swirl stabilises this unsteady dynamics and restores the jet's axisymmetry. This stabilising effect is then reversed in the breakdown regime at higher, where a variety of different and instabilities bifurcate from the steady flow as is increased. Several instances of hysteresis and subcritical behaviour are reported and discussed, including one that manifests precessing vortex core oscillations.

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vortex breakdown, bifurcation

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Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1017/jfm.2022.453

Publication Info

Douglas, CM, BL Emerson and TC Lieuwen (2022). Dynamics and bifurcations of laminar annular swirling and non-swirling jets. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 943. 10.1017/jfm.2022.453 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33227.

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Douglas

Christopher Douglas

Assistant Professor in the Thomas Lord Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science

Christopher Douglas' research and teaching in MEMS concentrate on thermo-fluid mechanics and nonlinear dynamics. He develops theoretical and numerical methods to analyze, understand, and engineer the behavior of high-dimensional nonlinear systems where fluid motion couples with thermal, chemical, acoustic, elastic, and other physical effects. These complex problems arise in engineering applications like turbines, rockets, and other propulsion and energy systems; in natural phenomena ranging from weather systems to supernovae; and in medical procedures such as laser lithotripsy. His broader research interests include energy conversion and pollutant emissions abatement, with particular attention to alternative energy carriers like hydrogen and ammonia.


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