Analyzing guard-heating to enable accurate hot-film wall shear stress measurements for turbulent flows

Author(s):  
Ali Etrati ◽  
Elsa Assadian ◽  
Rustom B. Bhiladvala
Author(s):  
Takuya Sawada ◽  
Osamu Terashima ◽  
Yasuhiko Sakai ◽  
Kouji Nagata ◽  
Mitsuhiro Shikida ◽  
...  

The objective of this study is to establish a technique for accurately measuring the wall shear stress in turbulent flows using a micro-fabricated hot-film sensor. Previously, we developed a hot-film sensor with a flexible polyimide-film substrate. This sensor can be attached to curved walls and be used in various situations. Furthermore, the sensor has a 20-μm-wide, heated thin metal film. However, the temporal resolution of this hot-film sensor is not very high owing to its substrate’s high heat capacity. Consequently, its performance is inadequate for measuring the wall shear stress “fluctuations” in turbulent flows. Therefore, we have developed another type of hot-film sensor in which the substrate is replaced with silicon, and a cavity has been introduced under the hot-film for reducing heat loss from the sensor and achieving high temporal resolution. Furthermore, for improving the sensor’s spatial resolution, the width of the hot-film is decreased to 10 μm. The structure of the hot-film’s pattern and the flow-detection mechanism are similar to those of the previous sensor. Experimental results show that new hot-film sensor works as expected and has better temporal resolution than the previous hot-film sensor. As future work, we will measure the wall shear stress for a turbulent wall-jet and discuss the relationship between a large-scale coherent vortex structure and wall shear stress based on data obtained using the new hot-film sensor.


Author(s):  
Elsa Assadian ◽  
Rustom B. Bhiladvala

The use of single flush-mounted thin-films for thermal sensing of wall shear stress fluctuations in turbulent flows has seen a decline, in spite of their non-intrusiveness, and the availability of microfabrication technologies to create very small films. The limitations of such single-element sensors are quite severe—their spatial resolution is not determined by their size alone, but modified by substrate heat conduction which creates variations in the effective sensor size (heat exchange area), dependent on strength and timescale of the fluctuations. Here a two-element design is investigated—with the hot-film sensor element surrounded by an electrically isolated guard heater film maintained at the same temperature as the sensor, but controlled by a separate anemometer circuit. Numerical studies are used to examine such guard heater designs over a range of shear stress values. The results show that if the sensor film center-location is biased towards the downstream end (75% and 65% of guard-heater length for water and air, respectively), with an appropriately-sized guard heater, 95% of the total heat generated in the sensing film can be transferred directly to the fluid, for strong turbulent fluctuations (Peclet number Pe > 8000) when the working fluid is water.


2012 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 489-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph Savelsberg ◽  
Michael Schiffer ◽  
Ernst Obermeier ◽  
Ian P. Castro

Author(s):  
C. Ariyaratne ◽  
F. Wang ◽  
S. He ◽  
A. E. Vardy

Hot-wire and hot-film anemometry are widely used in steady flows for instantaneous velocity measurements, and their use has been extended to velocity and wall shear stress measurements in unsteady flows. The technique of hot-film anemometry relies on the Reynolds analogy which relates the diffusion of heat to the momentum exchange. The paper investigates the applicability of the analogy in linearly varying flows. The investigation is a combination of CFD analyses using the Transition SST model and experimental measurements. Results show that, in a linearly accelerating flow, while wall shear stress increases immediately upon the onset of acceleration, heat transfer indicates a relative lag in response. A quantitative analysis of the effects of flow parameters shows that the deviant behaviour is especially pronounced with increasing acceleration and/or reduced initial flow Reynolds number. The initial deviation can be predicted using a non-dimensional parameter based on turbulence timescales and acceleration rate, thereby providing a possible solution to correcting wall shear stress measurements using hot-film anemometry in fast accelerating flows.


1988 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 235-238
Author(s):  
Subhashis Nandy ◽  
Alex Yefim Bekker ◽  
Gregory Allen Winchell ◽  
John Francis O'Riordan

Author(s):  
Christian Cierpka ◽  
Massimiliano Rossi ◽  
Christian J. Kähler

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