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Absolute and convective instabilities of plane turbulent wakes in a shallow water layer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 1997

DAOYI CHEN
Affiliation:
Hydrodynamics Research Group, School of Engineering, University of Manchester, M13 9PL, UK
GERHARD H. JIRKA
Affiliation:
Institute of Hydromechanics, University of Karlsruhe, Germany

Abstract

In shallow turbulent wake flows (typically an island wake), the flow patterns have been found experimentally to depend mainly on a shallow wake parameter, S=cfD/h in which cf is a quadratic-law friction coefficient, D is the island diameter and h is water depth. In order to understand the dependence of flow patterns on S, the shallow-water stability equation (a modified Orr–Sommerfeld equation) has been derived from the depth-averaged equations of motion with terms which describe bottom friction. Absolute and convective instabilities have been investigated on the basis of wake velocity profiles with a velocity deficit parameter R. Numerical computations have been carried out for a range of R-values and a stability diagram with two dividing lines was obtained, one defining the boundary between absolute and convective instabilities Sca, and another defining the transition between convectively unstable and stable wake flow Scc. The experimental measurements (Chen & Jirka 1995) of return velocities in shallow wakes were used to compute R-values and two critical values, SA=0.79 and SC=0.85, were obtained at the intersections with lines Sca and Scc. Through comparison with transition values observed experimentally for wakes with unsteady bubble (recirculation zone) and vortex shedding, SU and SV respectively, the sequence SC>SA> SU>SV shows vortex shedding to be the end product of absolute instability. This is analogous to the sequence of critical Reynolds numbers for an unbounded wake of large spanwise extent. Experimental frequency characteristics compare well with theoretical results. The observed values of SU and SV for different flow patterns correspond to the velocity profile with R=−0.945, which is located at the end of the wake bubble, and it provides the dominant mode.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1997 Cambridge University Press

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