Nonlinear dynamics involving multiple modes in high-speed transitional boundary layer
Xiao-Bai Li, Yifeng Chen, Chihyung Wen, Peixu Guo

TL;DR
This paper develops a framework to analyze complex mode interactions in high-speed boundary layer transition involving multiple primary instabilities, revealing nonlinear energy transfer mechanisms and early mode interplay.
Contribution
It introduces a general method to decompose and quantify energy transfer among multiple modes in nonlinear boundary layer transition, extending beyond traditional secondary instability analysis.
Findings
Higher-order modes are driven by specific triadic forcings.
Nonlinear energy transfer varies with the mode and stage of transition.
Early interactions between primary and secondary waves occur before transition onset.
Abstract
Extensive studies have investigated the transition mechanism of boundary layers initiated by a single primary instability. In a real-world scenario, however, multiple primary instabilities of different physical nature would coexist and generate more complicated stages of mode--mode interactions. For this scenario, conventional secondary stability analysis may not be applicable. In this work, a general framework is established to decompose the input--output system and to quantify the transfer of energy involving various modes. The linearized governing equation with nonlinear forcings is applied in a Mach 6 boundary layer, where two different types of primary instabilities are added simultaneously. As the primary-wave amplitudes increase to certain threshold, the nonlinear effect causes the saturation of the second mode and secondary growth of the first mode. In the generation stage of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Plasma and Flow Control in Aerodynamics · Turbomachinery Performance and Optimization
