IUTAM Symposium on
Unsteady Separated Flows and their Control
Chandris Dassia Hotel, Corfu, Greece, 18/22 June 2007
Chairmen, and Scientific Editors of this Volume
Marianna Braza |
Institut de Mécanique des Fluides de Toulouse-CNRS,France |
Kerry Hourigan |
Monash University, Clayton, Australia |
General context of this symposium
This IUTAM Symposium concerns an
important topic in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics nowadays. It
aims at achieving a unified approach which will regroup the knowledge
coming from theoretical, experimental, numerical simulation, modeling
and flow-control aspects of separated unsteady flows with respect to
incompressible and compressible flow regimes. The subject areas are
receiving a great deal of impetus from international research groups,
stimulated by major research programs related to this topic,
involving major industrial companies especially in Aeronautics in
various countries and by heading Government Programs. It aims to
bring together the groups of researchers working on the problems
related to the understanding and the prediction of unsteady,
separated flows. This symposium is inspired from a previously held
IUTAM symposium on unsteady separated flows in Toulouse, in 2002 by
the present host Institution, a symposium that has been quite a
success in the field. The present IUTAM symposium is an essential
extension of the topic to control theory and applications in respect
of unsteady separated flows.
The symposium of 2007 will address physical aspects of the dynamics related to unsteady separation in incompressible flows and flows under compressibility effects, and the state of the art methods for modelling these kinds of flows in high Reynolds numbers. Special attention will be paid to control theory and applications, especially including feed-back effects for the attenuation of unsteadiness and of flow separation. The understanding of the flow-physics and their efficient turbulence modelling remains a serious problem in a number of engineering applications, including Aeronautics and Aeroelasticity. Furthermore, the study of advanced flow modelling techniques, especially to control high-Reynolds number transitional and turbulent flows involving unsteady separation, is a crucial need in the above-mentioned domains of fundamental and applied research nowadays.
It is intended that people working in experimental investigation of unsteady separated flows, those working in the numerical simulation and turbulence modelling of these flows and those working in the domain of control theory should attend in order to stimulate the discussion in advancing the physical analysis of the related mechanisms and therefore to offer improvement in modelling and control of important unsteady phenomena arising in this class of flows. In this way, the symposium will contribute to a better insight of this important category of flows from a fundamental and applied research point of view by means of a synergy among the three main approaches: theoretical, experimental and prediction methods.
The Symposium will start on Monday, 18 June 2007 and will end on Friday, 22 June. It will consist of single plenary sessions with invited lectures (45 minutes), selected oral presentations (15 minutes), discussions on special topics and posters. There will be an attribution of best poster award, as in the IUTAM 2002 Symposium.
Symposium languages:
The official language for the Symposium is English
Scope
The physical mechanisms related to the
onset of unsteady separation and of its control are key features for
the understanding of fundamental aspects related to the dynamics of
the near wall region and for the suppression of nuisance effects
related with the flow unsteadiness (noise, loss of lift, dip-flutter,
buffeting phenomenon…). A thorough knowledge of the physical
mechanisms involved in the unsteady separation is a prerequisite for
the appropriate modeling of related flows that have a crucial
importance in major industrial applications. The reasons for the
appearance of unsteady separation are due to inherently unsteady
effects arising from the amplification of instabilities and to
forcing factors responsible for creation of adverse pressure
gradients, leading to detachment and to a roll-up process.
These
effects are of major interest to be analyzed in the context of
incompressible, subsonic, transonic and supersonic flow regimes. In
particular, the influence of compressibility on unsteady separation
will be of interest in the present symposium.
The effects of
unsteady separation on the global and local parameters of the flow
are of considerable interest in the mentioned domains and are
directly linked to the kind of coherent structures formed downstream
and to feedback mechanisms between the upstream and downstream
separation regions. The advances in the understanding of the physical
mechanisms related to these unsteady phenomena are of great
importance to achieve appropriate control methods to
attenuate/inhibit the instability and the onset of turbulence.
Advanced control methods will be examined in respect of their
efficiency in attenuating/suppressing the unsteady separation, the
flow-induced vibrations as well as the transonic regime unsteady
phenomena related to buffeting and dip-flutter.
The main objectives on which the present symposium focuses are listed below.
Experimental techniques for the dynamics of separation
Theoretical aspects of flow separation and analytical approaches
Instability and Transition
Compressibility effects related to unsteady separation
Direct and Large Eddy Simulation of unsteady separated flows
Statistical and hybrid Turbulence Modelling of unsteady separated flows
Theoretical and industrial aspects of unsteady separated flow control
The Symposium consists of single plenary sessions with invited lectures, selected oral presentations, discussions on special topics and posters. The short programme is available here and the detailed programme is displayed in the next page.
The chairmen and the scientific committee thank the
participants for their venue, their contribution and they wish a very
successful symposium.
Scientific Committee
Chairman: |
|
Dr. Marianna Braza |
CNRS - Institut de Mécanique des Fluides de Toulouse, France |
Co-Chairman: |
|
Prof. Kerry Hourigan |
Monash University, Australia |
Members: |
|
Prof. A. Bottaro |
Università di Genova, Italy |
Prof. C. Cercignani |
IUTAM Representative, Univ. of Milano, Italy |
Prof. B. J. Geurts |
University of Twente, The Netherlands |
Prof. G. E. Karniadakis |
Brown University, USA |
Dr. C. Norberg |
Lund Institute of Technology, Sweden |
Prof. F. Smith |
University College London, UK |
Prof. F. Thiele |
Technische Universität Berlin, Germany |
Prof. G. Tzabiras |
National Technical University of Athens, Greece |
Invited key-note speakers
Prof. T. BEWLEY |
University of California San Diego - USA - |
Prof. A. BOTTARO |
Università di Genova - Italy - |
Prof. CHIH-MING HO |
University of California Los Angeles - USA - |
Dr. P. DOERFFER |
Polish Academy of Sciences, Gdansk - Poland - |
Dr. J.P. DUSSAUGE |
CNRS - IUSTI - France - |
Prof. T. GATSKI |
Old Dominion Univ. - USA - and LEA Poitiers - France - |
Prof. B. GEURTS |
University of Twente - The Netherlands - |
Dr. W. HAASE |
EADS Münich - Germany - |
Prof. A. KLUWICK |
Technical University Vienna - Austria - |
Dr. T. LEWEKE |
CNRS - IRPHE - Marseille - France - |
Prof. P. SAGAUT |
Université Pierre et Marie Curie Paris 6 - France - |
Prof. M. PROVANSAL |
University Aix-Marseille - IRPHE - France - |
Prof. F. SMITH |
University College London - UK - |
Prof. M. THOMPSON |
Monash University, Clayton - Australia - |
Prof. M. TRIANTAFYLLOU |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology - USA - |
Prof. E. WESFREID |
Ecole Supérieure de Physique et de Chimie Industrielles, Paris - France - |
Prof. C. H. K. WILLIAMSON |
Cornell University - USA - |
Host Institution
The host Institution is the Institut de Mécanique des Fluides de Toulouse (IMFT), Unité Mixte de
Recherche N°5502, CNRS / INPT / UPS,affiliated
with: the French « Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique », the « Institut
National Polytechnique de Toulouse » and the
« Université Paul Sabatier ».
The Symposium is grateful to the IUTAM Committee for their support and for having attributed the IUTAM label to the symposium’s
topic, as well as to the to the Director of IMFT, Dr. J.
Magnaudet, to the President of INPT, Prof. Casamata, and
to the President of UPS, Prof. Jean-François Sautereau,
for their support.
Local organising committee
M. Braza, President, |
IMFT |
P. Chassaing, |
IMFT |
G. Harran, |
IMFT |
A. Sevrain, |
IMFT |
S. Saintlos Brillac, |
IMFT |
W. Haase, |
EADS Münich |
Y. Hoarau, |
Univ. Strasbourg |
M. Sabater, |
IMFT |
G. Martin, |
IMFT |
D. Bourrel, |
IMFT |
X. Benoit-Gonin, |
IMFT |
J.F. Alquier, |
IMFT |
E. Cid, |
IMFT |
S. Cazin, |
IMFT |
G. Barbut, |
IMFT |
R. Bourguet, |
IMFT |
R. El Akoury, |
IMFT |
G. Martinat, |
IMFT |
M. Liatsou, |
HELIOTOPOS iutam2007@heliotopos.net |
A. Papageorgiou, |
HELIOTOPOS iutam2007@heliotopos.net |
N. Rapti, |
HELIOTOPOS iutam2007@heliotopos.net |
K. Georgiou, |
NTUA |
G. Tzabiras, |
NTUA |
A. Zervos, |
NTUA |
General Services contributing to the Symposium
The symposium benefits from the general services of IMFT: Network and computing systems, (G. Martin), Signal-Image Processing (J.F. Alquier), Reprographics (M. Sabater), Numerical software (A. Stoukov), Administration (D. Barrau, C. Chupin and D. Bourrel) and Accounting services of ENSEEIHT, INPT and CNRS.
To the web site of the symposium contribute Y. Exposito and G. Martin, (IMFT), Y. Hoarau (Institut de Mécanique des Fluides et de Solides, Univ. Strasbourg).
We are grateful to these services for their continuous assistance to this symposium.