Open-loop control of noise amplification in a separated boundary layer flow
Edouard Boujo, Uwe Ehrenstein, Fran\c{c}ois Gallaire

TL;DR
This paper investigates how small noise can cause large flow disturbances in a separated boundary layer, and proposes an open-loop control strategy to suppress noise amplification and stabilize the flow.
Contribution
It introduces a sensitivity-based open-loop control method to reduce noise amplification in separated boundary-layer flows, validated through nonlinear simulations.
Findings
Large optimal gains indicate high noise sensitivity.
Control at the bump summit significantly reduces gain and delays transition.
Flow stabilization is confirmed by both linear and nonlinear analyses.
Abstract
Linear optimal gains are computed for the subcritical two-dimensional separated boundary-layer flow past a bump. Very large optimal gain values are found, making it possible for small-amplitude noise to be strongly amplified and to destabilize the flow. The optimal forcing is located close to the summit of the bump, while the optimal response is the largest in the shear layer. The largest amplification occurs at frequencies corresponding to eigenvalues which first become unstable at higher Reynolds number. Nonlinear direct numerical simulations show that a low level of noise is indeed sufficient to trigger random flow unsteadiness, characterized here by large-scale vortex shedding. Next, a variational technique is used to compute efficiently the sensitivity of optimal gains to steady control (through source of momentum in the flow, or blowing/suction at the wall). A systematic analysis…
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