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Featured researches published by Outi Tammisola.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2011

Stabilizing effect of surrounding gas flow on a plane liquid sheet

Outi Tammisola; Atsushi Sasaki; Fredrik Lundell; Masaharu Matsubara; L. Daniel Söderberg

The stability of a plane liquid sheet is studied experimentally and theoretically, with an emphasis on the effect of the surrounding gas. Co-blowing with a gas velocity of the same order of magnitu ...


Physics of Fluids | 2011

Effect of surface tension on global modes of confined wake flows

Outi Tammisola; Fredrik Lundell; L. Daniel Söderberg

Many wake flows are susceptible to self-sustained oscillations, such as the well-known von Karman vortex street behind a cylinder that makes a rope beat against a flagpole at a distinct frequency o ...


Physics of Fluids | 2013

Linear stability of miscible two-fluid flow down an incline

R. Usha; Outi Tammisola; Rama Govindarajan

We show that miscible two-layer free-surface flows of varying viscosity down an inclined substrate are different in their stability characteristics from both immiscible two-layer flows, and flows with viscosity gradients spanning the entire flow. New instability modes arise when the critical layer of the viscosity transport equation overlaps the viscosity gradient. A lubricating configuration with a less viscous wall layer is identified to be the most stabilizing at moderate miscibility (moderate Peclet numbers). This also is in contrast with the immiscible case, where the lubrication configuration is always destabilizing. The co-existence that we find under certain circumstances, of several growing overlap modes, the usual surface mode, and a Tollmien-Schlichting mode, presents interesting new possibilities for nonlinear breakdown.


Physics of Fluids | 2015

Breaking axi-symmetry in stenotic flow lowers the critical transition Reynolds number

John Samuelsson; Outi Tammisola; Matthew P. Juniper

Flow through a sinuous stenosis with varying degrees of non-axisymmetric shape variations and at Reynolds number ranging from 250 to 750 is investigated using direct numerical simulation (DNS) and global linear stability analysis. At low Reynolds numbers (Re < 390), the flow is always steady and symmetric for an axisymmetric geometry. Two steady state solutions are obtained when the Reynolds number is increased: a symmetric steady state and an eccentric, non-axisymmetric steady state. Either one can be obtained in the DNS depending on the initial condition. A linear global stability analysis around the symmetric and non-axisymmetric steady state reveals that both flows are linearly stable for the same Reynolds number, showing that the first bifurcation from symmetry to antisymmetry is subcritical. When the Reynolds number is increased further, the symmetric state becomes linearly unstable to an eigenmode, which drives the flow towards the non-axisymmetric state. The symmetric state remains steady up to Re...


arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2017

Effect of viscosity ratio on the self-sustained instabilitiesin planar immiscible jets

Outi Tammisola; Jean-Christophe Loiseau; Luca Brandt

Previous studies have shown that intermediate magnitude of surface tension has a counterintuitive destabilizing effect on two-phase planar jets. In the present study, the transition process in confined two-dimensional jets of two fluids with varying viscosity ratio is investigated using direct numerical simulations (DNSs). The outer fluid coflow velocity is 17% of that of the central jet. Neutral curves for the appearance of persistent oscillations are found by recording the norm of the velocity residuals in DNS for over 1000 nondimensional time units or until the signal has reached a constant level in a logarithmic scale, either a converged steady state or a “statistically steady” oscillatory state. Oscillatory final states are found for all viscosity ratios ranging from 10−1 to 10. For uniform viscosity (m=1), the first bifurcation is through a surface-tension-driven global instability. On the other hand, for low viscosity of the outer fluid, there is a mode competition between a steady asymmetric Coanda-type attachment mode and the surface-tension-induced mode. At moderate surface tension, the first bifurcation is through the Coanda-type attachment, which eventually triggers time-dependent convective bursts. At high surface tension, the first bifurcation is through the surface-tension-dominated mode. For high viscosity of the outer fluid, persistent oscillations appear due to a strong convective instability, although it is shown that absolute instability may be possible at even higher viscosity ratios. Finally, we show that the jet is still convectively and absolutely unstable far from the inlet when the shear profile is nearly constant. Comparing this situation to a parallel Couette flow (without inflection points), we show that in both flows, a hidden interfacial mode brought out by surface tension becomes temporally and absolutely unstable in an intermediate Weber and Reynolds regime. By an energy analysis of the Couette flow case, we show that surface tension, although dissipative, can induce a velocity field near the interface that extracts energy from the flow through a viscous mechanism. This study highlights the rich dynamics of immiscible planar uniform-density jets, where different self-sustained and convective mechanisms compete and the nature of the instability depends on the exact parameter values.


ASME Turbo Expo 2015: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition, GT 2015, Montreal, Canada, 15 June 2015 through 19 June 2015 | 2015

Adjoint sensitivity analysis of hydrodynamic stability in a gas turbine fuel injector

Outi Tammisola; Matthew P. Juniper

Hydrodynamic oscillations in gas turbine fuel injectors help to mix the fuel and air but can also contribute to thermoacoustic instability. Small changes to some parts of a fuel injector greatly affect the frequency and amplitude of these oscillations. These regions can be identified efficiently with adjoint-based sensitivity analysis. This is a linear technique that identifies the region of the flow that causes the oscillation, the regions of the flow that are most sensitive to external forcing, and the regions of the flow that, when altered, have most influence on the oscillation. In this paper, we extend this to the flow from a gas turbine’s single stream radial swirler, which has been extensively studied experimentally (GT2008-50278) [8].The swirling annular flow enters the combustion chamber and expands to the chamber walls, forming a conical recirculation zone along the centreline and an annular recirculation zone in the upstream corner. In this study, the steady base flow and the stability analysis are calculated at Re 200–3800 based on the mean flow velocity and inlet diameter. The velocity field is similar to that found from experiments and LES, and the local stability results are close to those at higher Re (GT2012-68253) [11].All the analyses (experiments, LES, uRANS, local stability, and the global stability in this paper) show that a helical motion develops around the central recirculation zone. This develops into a precessing vortex core. The adjoint-based sensitivity analysis reveals that the frequency and growth rate of the oscillation is dictated by conditions just upstream of the central recirculation zone (the wavemaker region). It also reveals that this oscillation is very receptive to forcing at the sharp edges of the injector. In practical situations, this forcing could arise from an impinging acoustic wave, showing that these edges could be influential in the feedback mechanism that causes thermoacoustic instability.The analysis also shows how the growth rate and frequency of the oscillation change with either small shape changes of the nozzle, or additional suction or blowing at the walls of the injector. It reveals that the oscillations originate in a very localized region at the entry to the combustion chamber, which lies near the separation point at the outer inlet, and extends to the outlet of the inner pipe. Any scheme designed to control the frequency and amplitude of the oscillation only needs to change the flow in this localized region.Copyright


7th IUTAM Symposium on Laminar-Turbulent Transition, Royal Inst Technol, Stockholm, SWEDEN, JUN 23-26, 2009 | 2010

Global stability of a plane liquid jet surrounded by gas

Outi Tammisola; Fredrik Lundell; Daniel Söderberg; Atsushi Sasaki; Masaharu Matsubara

The global stability of a liquid sheet in gas is studied. The global 3D stability problem for a 2D base flow is formulated, including surface tension of the interface, and the viscosity and density of both phases. The implementational requirements are clarified, and met by using a parallel code for eigenvalue computations based on the mathematical software libraries PARPACK and ScaLAPACK. Preliminary eigenvalue spectra and eigenmodes are presented for the case of a water jet surrounded by air.


5th Flow Control Conference; Chicago, IL; United States; 28 June 2010 through 1 July 2010 | 2010

Measurement-Integrated simulations and Kalman filter applied to a co-flowing jet

Kentaro Imagawa; Gabriele Bellani; Outi Tammisola; Fredrik Lundell; Hiroshi Higuchi; Toshiyuki Hayase

This paper deals with the experimental evaluation of a flow analysis system based on the integration between an under-resolved Navier-Stokes simulation and experimental measurements with the mechanism of feedback (referred to as Measurement-Integrated simulation), applied to the case of a planar turbulent co-flowing jet. The experiments are performed with inner-to-outer-jet velocity ratio around 2 and the Reynolds number based on the inner-jet heights about 10000. The measurement system is a high-speed PIV, which provides time-resolved data of the flow-field, on a field of view which extends to 20 jet heights downstream the jet outlet. The experimental data can thus be used both for providing the feedback data for the simulations and for validation of the MI-simulations over a wide region. The effect of reduced data-rate and spatial extent of the feedback (i.e. measurements are not available at each simulation time-step or discretization point) was investigated. At first simulations were run with full information in order to obtain an upper limit of the MI-simulations performance. The results show the potential of this methodology of reproducing first and second order statistics of the turbulent flow with good accuracy. Then, to deal with the reduced data different feedback strategies were tested. It was found that for small data-rate reduction the results are basically equivalent to the case of full-information feedback but as the feedback data-rate is reduced further the error increases and tend to be localized in regions of high turbulent activity. Moreover, it is found that the spatial distribution of the error looks qualitatively different for different feedback strategies. Feedback gain distributions calculated by optimal control theory are presented and proposed as a mean to make it possible to perform MI-simulations based on localized measurements only. So far, we have not been able to low error between measurements and simulations by using these gain distributions.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2011

The local and global stability of confined planar wakes at intermediate Reynolds number

Matthew P. Juniper; Outi Tammisola; Fredrik Lundell


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2011

Global linear and nonlinear stability of viscous confined plane wakes with co-flow

Outi Tammisola; Fredrik Lundell; Philipp Schlatter; Armin Wehrfritz; L. Daniel Söderberg

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Fredrik Lundell

Royal Institute of Technology

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Daniel Söderberg

Royal Institute of Technology

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L. Daniel Söderberg

Royal Institute of Technology

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R. Usha

Indian Institute of Technology Madras

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Rama Govindarajan

Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research

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