Laminar boundary layer near the rotating end wall of a confined vortex
Abstract
The results of an experimental and theoretical investigation of the fluid mechanics in a confined vortex are discussed with particular emphasis on behavior away from the axis of symmetry and near the end walls. The vortex is generated in a rotating cylindrical chamber with an exit opening in one end. Both end walls rotate. For the range of flow rates and swirl ratios (S between 1 and 5) of interest here, the flow field far from the end walls behaves as inviscid and irrotational; and the end wall boundary layers are thin and laminar. Measurements and calculations of tangential and radial velocity in the end wall region show the development of a secondary flow resulting in a strong velocity 'overshoot' in the radial component. Results illustrating the nature of the velocity variations on the end walls are presented; and it is shown that the mass flow rate through the end wall boundary layers, while only a small fraction of the total flow, increases with increasing swirl and with decreasing total flow rate through the chamber.
- Publication:
-
ASME Journal of Fluids Engineering
- Pub Date:
- June 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982ATJFE.104..171S
- Keywords:
-
- Laminar Boundary Layer;
- Vortices;
- Wall Flow;
- Flow Velocity;
- Radial Velocity;
- Rotating Cylinders;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer