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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Solutions to three laminar viscous flow problems by an implicit finite-difference method

Chyu, Wei Jao January 1965 (has links)
This paper deals with three problems, (1) laminar incompressible viscous flow past a cylinder and a sphere, (2) laminar incompressible viscous flow past a finite flat plate (second-order solutions), and (3) laminar viscous past a sphere at a high Mach number. These problems are solved by using an implicit finite-difference method. The first problem (flow past a sphere and a cylinder) involves the classical boundary-layer equations which are the first approximation to the Navier-Stokes equations in a region near to the body surface for high Reynolds number. The computational results were obtained for the distribution of velocity components in the boundary-layer, and the variation of skin-friction and displacement-thickness along the body. The second problem (second-order flow past a finite flat plate) involves the second-order boundary-layer equations which introduce only the effect of the displacement-thickness in the case of flow past a flat plate. An assumption is made that the displacement-thickness is constant in the wake behind the flat plate. The adequacy of this assumption is checked from solutions based on the calculated displacement-thickness in the wake. The wake behind the finite flat plate is assumed laminar, and its displacement-thickness and the velocity distribution are computed downstream, by using the implicit finite-difference method. In the third problem (high Mach number flow past a sphere), constant density is assumed in the shock layer. This is nearly true in the stagnation-point region, especially if the flow is hypersonic and the temperature of the sphere is nearly the same as the stagnation-temperature. It is also assumed that the shock is nearly spherical, even though it is not spherical as it is in the inviscid case. The numerical results will show that the assumption of a spherical shock will, however, nearly be true. This problem involves the solution of the complete Navier-Stokes equations. These equations are solved for various Reynolds numbers by two methods; namely the truncated series method and the implicit finite-difference method. The solutions by the implicit finite-difference method are in excellent accord with those obtained by the series solutions in the stagnation-point region. As the computation by the finite-difference method proceeds downstream, the deviation of the finite-difference solution from the series solution increases. This is due to the fact that the series is valid only around the stagnation-point, and is thus expected to give inaccurate solutions downstream. The finite-difference method has no such restrictions, however, and gives accurate results in the whole flow field. In conclusion, solutions by the implicit finite-difference method have proven not only to be accurate but also to be stable in all examples computed. / Ph. D.

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