On the preferred flapping motion of round twin jets
Daniel Rodriguez, Michael N. Stavropoulos, Petronio A. S. Nogueira, Daniel Edgington-Mitchell, Peter Jordan

TL;DR
This paper uses linear stability theory to analyze the preferred flapping motions in twin jets, revealing how jet interaction influences the dominance of varicose and sinuous oscillations over helical modes.
Contribution
It extends linear stability analysis to twin jets, identifying how jet separation and flow parameters determine the preferred flapping oscillation modes.
Findings
Large jet separation favors helical modes.
Decreasing jet separation promotes flapping oscillations.
Jet Mach number and temperature ratio influence mode preference.
Abstract
Linear stability theory (LST) is often used to model the large-scale flow structures in the turbulent mixing region and near pressure field of high-speed jets. For perfectly-expanded single round jets, these models predict the dominance of and helical modes for the lower frequency range, in agreement with empirical data. When LST is applied to twin-jet systems, four solution families appear following the odd/even behaviour of the pressure field about the symmetry planes. The interaction between the unsteady pressure fields of the two jets also results in their coupling. The individual modes of the different solution families no longer correspond to helical motions, but to flapping oscillations of the jet plumes. In the limit of large jet separations, when the jet coupling vanishes, the eigenvalues corresponding to the mode in each family are identical, and a linear…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet Flows · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Computational Fluid Dynamics and Aerodynamics
