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Method of Assumed Profiles

1. The method of assumed profiles approximates the boundary layer velocity profile with a simple function containing one unknown parameter δ(x). 2. Integrating this assumed profile provides expressions for boundary layer thickness δ*, displacement thickness θ, and skin friction coefficient Cf in terms of δ. 3. These expressions are substituted into the boundary layer equations to obtain an ordinary differential equation for δ(x), which can then be integrated numerically to solve for the boundary layer over a flat plate, reproducing the Blasius solution reasonably well given the simplicity of the assumed linear profile.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views4 pages

Method of Assumed Profiles

1. The method of assumed profiles approximates the boundary layer velocity profile with a simple function containing one unknown parameter δ(x). 2. Integrating this assumed profile provides expressions for boundary layer thickness δ*, displacement thickness θ, and skin friction coefficient Cf in terms of δ. 3. These expressions are substituted into the boundary layer equations to obtain an ordinary differential equation for δ(x), which can then be integrated numerically to solve for the boundary layer over a flat plate, reproducing the Blasius solution reasonably well given the simplicity of the assumed linear profile.

Uploaded by

prasanth77
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Method of Assumed Profiles

Here are the basic steps:

1. Assume some basic boundary velocity profile for u ( x, y ) . For example, this is a
crude approach but illustrates the ideas:

 y
u( x, y )  ,0 ≤ y < δ ( x )
=  δ ( x)
ue ( x ) 
 1, y ≥ δ ( x )

where δ (x) is the single unknown describing the velocity distribution.

2. Calculate δ * , θ (or H ) , and C f for the assumed profile:

∞ δ δ
 u  y  1 y2 
δ = ∫  1 −  dy = ∫  1 −  dy =  y −
*

0
ue  0
δ  2 δ 0

1
⇒ δ* = δ
2

∞ δ δ
u u y y  1 y2 1 y3 
θ = ∫  1 −  dy = ∫  1 −  dy =  − 2 
u
0 e 
ue  0
δ δ  2 δ 3 δ 0

1
⇒θ= δ
6

1
δ * δ
Note: H= = 2 =3
θ 1δ
6

∂u
Finally, to find C f we need τ w = µ
∂y y =0

∂u ∂  y u
= ue   = e , for 0 ≤ y < δ
∂y ∂y  δ  δ
Method of Assumed Profiles

ue
τw µ 2µ
⇒ Cf = = δ =
1
ρ eue2
1
ρ eue2 ρ eueδ
2 2

3. Plug results from step 2 into integral b.l. equation:

Cf dθ θ du
= + (2 + H ) e
2 dx u e dx

So, for our assumed linear profile:

µ 1 d δ 5δ due
= + (1)
ρ eueδ 6 dx 6ue dx

where δ (x) is the only unknown. We can solve this by specifying u e (x) , setting
an initial value for δ at x = 0 (i.e. the leading edge) and then integrate in x .
Note: in many cases, this integration will need to be done numerically.

Example: Flat Plate

y
Ue(x)=U ρe=ρ 8
8

U δ*(x)
8 8

ρ x

Since u e ( x) = u ∞ is a constant, the governing equation (1) becomes:

µ 1 dδ
=
ρ ∞ u ∞δ 6 dx

Re-arrange and integrate:

16.100 2002 2
Method of Assumed Profiles

6µ dδ

ρ ∞U ∞ dx
6µ 1 d (δ 2 )
=
ρ ∞U ∞ 2 dx
6µ 1 d (δ 2 )
x x

∫0 ρ ∞U ∞ dx =
2 ∫0 dx
dx

6µ 1
x = δ 2 ( x ) − δ 2 (0) 
ρ ∞U ∞ 2

But, our initial condition is δ (0) = 0 .

6µ 1
x = δ 2 ( x)
ρ ∞U ∞ 2

δ 12 µ 2 3 3.464
⇒ = = =
x ρ ∞U ∞ x Re x Re x

δ* 1 δ 1 2 3
⇒ = 2
=
x x 2 Re x

δ* 3 1.732
= =
x Re x Re x

and C f :
2µ 2µ Re x
Cf = =
ρ eueδ ρ ∞u∞ x 2 3
1
Cf =
3 Re x
0.577
Cf =
Re x

16.100 2002 3
Method of Assumed Profiles

Comparison with Blasius solution:

Blasius Int. Method with linear velocity

δ*
Re x 1.720 1.732
x

C f Re x 0.664 0.577

16.100 2002 4

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