Investigation of G\"{o}rtler vortices in high-speed boundary layers via an efficient numerical solution to the non-linear boundary region equations
Omar Es-Sahli, Adrian Sescu, Mohammed Afsar, Yuji Hattori

TL;DR
This paper introduces an efficient numerical method based on boundary region equations to study G"{o}rtler vortices in high-speed boundary layers, significantly reducing computational costs compared to traditional methods.
Contribution
The paper develops a BRE-based numerical algorithm that outperforms DNS and PSE models in efficiency and theoretical rigor for high-speed boundary layer vortex analysis.
Findings
BRE method predicts vortex development in minutes on a single processor.
The approach enables feasible feedback control investigations.
Results vary with Mach number and disturbance spanwise separation.
Abstract
Streamwise vortices and the associated streaks evolve in boundary layers over flat or concave surfaces due to disturbances initiated upstream or triggered by the wall surface. Following the transient growth phase, the fully-developed vortex structures become susceptible to inviscid secondary instabilities resulting in early transition to turbulence via `bursting' processes. In high-speed boundary layers, more complications arise due to compressibility and thermal effects, which become more significant for higher Mach numbers. In this paper, we study G\"{o}rtler vortices developing in high-speed boundary layers using the boundary region equations (BRE) formalism, which we solve using an efficient numerical algorithm. Streaks are excited using a small transpiration velocity at the wall. Our BRE-based algorithm is found to be superior to direct numerical simulation (DNS) and ad-hoc…
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