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On the instantaneous cutting of a columnar vortex with non-zero axial flow

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 1997

J. S. MARSHALL
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA
S. KRISHNAMOORTHY
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA

Abstract

A study of the response of a columnar vortex with non-zero axial flow to impulsive cutting has been performed. The flow evolution is computed based on the vorticity–velocity formulation of the axisymmetric Euler equation using a Lagrangian vorticity collocation method. The vortex response is compared to analytical predictions obtained using the plug-flow model of Lundgren & Ashurst (1989). The plug-flow model indicates that axial motion on a vortex core with variable core area behaves in a manner analogous to one-dimensional gas dynamics in a tube, with the vortex core area playing a role analogous to the gas density. The solution for impulsive cutting of a vortex obtained from the plug-flow model thus resembles the classic problem of impulsive motion of a piston in a tube, with formation of an upstream-propagating vortex ‘shock’ (over which the core radius changes discontinuously) and a downstream-propagating vortex ‘expansion wave’ on opposite sides of the cutting surface. Direct computations of the vortex response from the Euler equation reveal similar upstream- and downstream-propagating waves following impulsive cutting for cases where the initial vortex flow is subcritical. These waves in core radius are produced by a series of vortex rings, embedded within the columnar vortex core, having azimuthal vorticity of alternating sign. The effect of the compression and expansion waves is to bring the axial and radial velocity components to nearly zero behind the propagating vortex rings, in a region on both sides of the cutting surface with ever-increasing length. The change in vortex core radius and the variation in pressure along the cutting surface agree very well with the predictions of the plug-flow model for subcritical flow after the compression and expansion waves have propagated sufficiently far away. For the case where the ambient vortex flow is supercritical, no upstream-propagating wave is possible on the compression side of the vortex, and the vortex axial flow is observed to impact on the cutting surface in a manner similar to that commonly observed for a non-rotating jet impacting on a wall. The flow appears to approach a steady state near the point of impact after a sufficiently long time. The vortex response on the expansion side of the cutting surface exhibits a downstream-propagating vortex expansion wave for both the subcritical and supercritical conditions. The results of the vortex response study are used to formulate and verify predictions for the net normal force exerted by the vortex on the cutting surface. An experimental study of the cutting of a vortex by a thin blade has also been performed in order to verify and assess the limitations of the instantaneous vortex cutting model for application to actual vortex–body interaction problems.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1997 Cambridge University Press

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