PIV and Rotational Raman-Based Temperature Measurements for CFD Validation in a Single Injector Cooling Flow
Author(s) -
Mark P. Wernet,
Nicholas J. Georgiadis,
Randy J. Locke
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
2018 fluid dynamics conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.237
H-Index - 7
DOI - 10.2514/6.2018-3857
Subject(s) - computational fluid dynamics , injector , materials science , flow (mathematics) , mechanics , temperature measurement , nuclear engineering , raman spectroscopy , environmental science , aerospace engineering , mechanical engineering , physics , thermodynamics , optics , engineering
Film cooling is used in a wide variety of engineering applications for protection of surfaces from hot or combusting gases. The design of more efficient thin film cooling geometries/configurations could be facilitated by an ability to accurately model and predict the effectiveness of current designs using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code predictions. Hence, a benchmark set of flow field property data were obtained for use in assessing current CFD capabilities and for development of better turbulence models. Both Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) and spontaneous rotational Raman scattering (SRS) spectroscopy were used to acquire high quality, spatially-resolved measurements of the mean velocity, turbulence intensity and also the mean temperature and normalized root mean square (rms) temperatures in a single injector cooling flow arrangement. In addition to flowfield measurements, thermocouple measurements on the plate surface enabled estimates of the film effectiveness. Raman spectra in air were obtained across a matrix of radial and axial locations downstream from a 68.07 mm square nozzle blowing heated air over a range of temperatures and Mach numbers, across a 30.48 cm long plate equipped with a single injector cooling hole. In addition, both centerline streamwise 2-component PIV and cross-stream 3-component Stereo PIV data at 15 axial stations were collected in the same flows. The velocity and temperature data were then compared against Wind-US CFD code predictions for the same flow conditions. The results of this and planned follow-on studies will support NASA’s development and assessment of turbulence models for heated flows. The data set of Raman temperature data and PIV velocity data covering the complete test matrix listed in Table 1 is available in an accompanying DVD (available online from www.sti.nasa.gov) for anyone interested in further analysis.
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