The structure of energy-containing turbulence in the outer region of a zero-pressure-
gradient boundary layer has been studied using particle image velocimetry (PIV) to
measure the instantaneous velocity fields in a streamwise-wall-normal plane. Experiments
performed at three Reynolds numbers in the range 930 < Reθ < 6845 show
that the boundary layer is densely populated by velocity fields associated with hairpin
vortices. (The term ‘hairpin’ is here taken to represent cane, hairpin, horseshoe, or
omega-shaped vortices and deformed versions thereof, recognizing these structures are
variations of a common basic flow structure at different stages of evolution and with
varying size, age, aspect ratio, and symmetry.) The signature pattern of the hairpin
consists of a spanwise vortex core located above a region of strong second-quadrant
fluctuations (u < 0 and v > 0) that occur on a locus
inclined at 30–60° to the wall.
In the outer layer, hairpin vortices occur in streamwise-aligned packets that propagate
with small velocity dispersion. Packets that begin in or slightly above the buffer
layer are very similar to the packets created by the autogeneration mechanism (Zhou,
Adrian & Balachandar 1996). Individual packets grow upwards in the streamwise
direction at a mean angle of approximately 12°, and the hairpins in packets are typically
spaced several hundred viscous lengthscales apart in the streamwise direction.
Within the interior of the envelope the spatial coherence between the velocity fields
induced by the individual vortices leads to strongly retarded streamwise momentum,
explaining the zones of uniform momentum observed by Meinhart & Adrian
(1995). The packets are an important type of organized structure in the wall layer
in which relatively small structural units in the form of three-dimensional vortical
structures are arranged coherently, i.e. with correlated spatial relationships, to form
much longer structures. The formation of packets explains the occurrence of multiple
VITA events in turbulent ‘bursts’, and the creation of Townsend's (1958) large-scale
inactive motions. These packets share many features of the hairpin models proposed
by Smith (1984) and co-workers for the near-wall layer, and by Bandyopadhyay
(1980), but they are shown to occur in a hierarchy of scales across most of the
boundary layer.
In the logarithmic layer, the coherent vortex packets that originate close to the wall
frequently occur within larger, faster moving zones of uniform momentum, which may
extend up to the middle of the boundary layer. These larger zones are the induced
interior flow of older packets of coherent hairpin vortices that originate upstream
and over-run the younger, more recently generated packets. The occurence of small
hairpin packets in the environment of larger hairpin packets is a prominent feature
of the logarithmic layer. With increasing Reynolds number, the number of hairpins
in a packet increases.