Linear stability, transient energy growth and the role of viscosity stratification in compressible plane Couette flow
M. Malik, J. Dey, Meheboob Alam

TL;DR
This paper investigates linear stability and transient energy growth in compressible plane Couette flow, highlighting how viscosity stratification affects flow stability and transition delay, with detailed analysis of energy transfer mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a comparative analysis of uniform and stratified viscosity flows, revealing the impact of viscosity stratification on stability, energy growth, and transition delay in compressible Couette flow.
Findings
Uniform shear flow has a lower critical Reynolds number than stratified flow.
Maximum energy amplification is higher in uniform shear flow.
Viscosity stratification delays flow transition.
Abstract
Linear stability and the non-modal transient energy growth in compressible plane Couette flow are investigated for two prototype mean flows: (a) the {\it uniform shear} flow with constant viscosity, and (b) the {\it non-uniform shear} flow with {\it stratified} viscosity. Both mean flows are linearly unstable for a range of supersonic Mach numbers (). For a given , the critical Reynolds number () is significantly smaller for the uniform shear flow than its non-uniform shear counterpart. An analysis of perturbation energy reveals that the instability is primarily caused by an excess transfer of energy from mean-flow to perturbations. It is shown that the energy-transfer from mean-flow occurs close to the moving top-wall for ``mode I'' instability, whereas it occurs in the bulk of the flow domain for ``mode II''. For the non-modal analysis, it is shown that the maximum…
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