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Investigation of a turbulent spot and a tripped turbulent boundary layer flow using time-resolved tomographic PIV
Author(s) -
Andreas Schröder,
Reinhard Geisler,
Gerrit E. Elsinga,
Fulvio Scarano,
Uwe Dierksheide
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
experiments in fluids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.01
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1432-1114
pISSN - 0723-4864
DOI - 10.1007/s00348-007-0403-2
Subject(s) - streak , turbulence , particle image velocimetry , optics , physics , laminar flow , boundary layer , flow visualization , tomographic reconstruction , flow (mathematics) , reynolds number , vortex , vorticity , mechanics , tomography
In this feasibility study the tomographic PIV technique has been applied to time resolved PIV recordings for the study of the growth of a turbulent spot in a laminar flat plate boundary layer and to visualize the topology of\udcoherent flow structures within a tripped turbulent flat plate boundary layer flow. The experiments are performed around (Rex )½ ≈ 450 in a low speed wind-tunnel using four high speed CMOS cameras operating up to 5 kHz. The volume illumination required a multiple-reflection system able to intensify light intensity within the measurement volume. This aspect is deemed essential when a high-speed tomographic PIV system is applied in air flows. The particle image recordings are used for a three dimensional tomographic reconstruction of the light intensity distribution\udwithin the illuminated volume. Each pair of reconstructed three-dimensional light distributions is analyzed by 3D spatial cross-correlation using iterative multi-grid schemes with volume-deformation, yielding a correlated time\udsequence of three-dimensional instantaneous velocity vector volumes. The coherent structures organization is analyzed by 3D-vorticity and -swirling-strength iso-surfaces visualization. In both flow types streaks and hairpin-like or arch vortical structures are most prominent. The data giving insight into the role of these structures for the spatio-temporal arrangement of the wall normal flow exchange mechanisms, especially of the instantaneous Reynolds stress events Q2 and Q4. A description of different self-sustainable flow organizations based on modifications of the hairpin-vortex- and\udstreak- models is given. Two preliminary results are essential: Self-sustainability of a coherent vortical structure depends on the possibility to entrain high momentum fluid, initially Q4. And, stream-wise swirl at the near-wall region of arch or hairpin-like vortices has been observed to be seldom

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