Effects of Wire Length in Turbulence Investigations with a Hot-Wire Anemometer

1954 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. N. Frenkiel

SummaryThe paper discusses the influence of wire length on the characteristics of a turbulent flow as measured with a hot-wire anemometer. Most of the mathematical treatment can be directly applied to other problems of length correction, such as may occur, for instance, in problems of astrophysical turbulence, as well as to some problems related to measurements of random processes. The discussion will, however, use the example of a hot-wire anemometer with particular attention to the influence of the length of the wire on the measurement of the intensity of turbulence, correlation coefficients, and scale and microscale of turbulence.

1967 ◽  
Vol 71 (679) ◽  
pp. 511-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Hoole ◽  
J. R. Calvert

The hot-wire anemometer is one of the few instruments which can be used to make velocity measurements in turbulent and unsteady flows. However, the probe supporting the wire inevitably interferes with the local flow and it has been found that the effect of this interference on the reading of the anemometer varies considerably as the orientation of the probe to the flow direction is changed (the wire itself being maintained in the same direction). This leads to errors in any measurements taken where the instantaneous local flow direction differs significantly at any time from the direction for which the anemometer was calibrated. Such errors are quite separate from, and in addition to, errors due to finite wire length, incidence of the wire to the local stream direction, etc.


1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (4) ◽  
pp. 771-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald M. C. So

When a circular cylinder is placed in a two-dimensional shear flow, a lift force is experienced by the cylinder. In the case of hot-wire measurements in the viscous sublayer, this will give rise to a displacement of the wire from its true position. The resultant measurements are found to be in error if the wire length to diameter ratio is > 300 and the shear gradient of the flow is large.


10.29007/zw9k ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuhide Nakata ◽  
Kazuki Umemoto ◽  
Kenji Kaneko ◽  
Ryusuke Fujisawa

This study addresses the development of a robot for inspection of old bridges. By suspending the robot with a wire and controlling the wire length, the movement of the robot is realized. The robot mounts a high-definition camera and aims to detect cracks on the concrete surface of the bridge using this camera. An inspection method using an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) has been proposed. Compared to the method using an unmanned aerial vehicle, the wire suspended robot system has the advantage of insensitivity to wind and ability to carry heavy equipments, this makes it possible to install a high-definition camera and a cleaning function to find cracks that are difficult to detect due to dirt.


2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellann Cohen ◽  
Leon Glicksman

When the transient hot-wire method is used to measure the thermal conductivity of very low thermal conductivity silica aerogel (in the range of 10 mW/m·K at 1 atm) end effects due to the finite wire size and radiation corrections must be considered. An approximate method is presented to account for end effects with realistic boundary conditions. The method was applied to small experimental samples of the aerogel using different wire lengths. Initial conductivity results varied with wire length. This variation was eliminated by the use of the end effect correction. The test method was validated with the NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) Standard Reference Material 1459, fumed silica board to within 1 mW/m·K. The aerogel is semitransparent. Due to the small wire radius and short transient, radiation heat transfer may not be fully accounted for. In a full size aerogel panel radiation will augment the phonon conduction by a larger amount.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 281-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiwei Wang ◽  
Minyoung Suh

In the current research, we aimed to investigate whether customized 3-D underwires improve bra performance. The first experiment was designed to study whether customized 3-D printed underwires provide significant benefits over conventional wires. Customized 3-D underwires were produced following individual breast root shapes and compared with conventional underwires through wear trials. According to the empirical data, pressure was significantly reduced with the customized underwire, and performance improvement was more evident with wearing sensations of support and comfort. In the second experiment, we varied the length of the customized underwires and observed how the length of underwires influenced bra performance. More pressure was found in the outer region of the longest underwires than the medium-length wires but support and comfort sensations did not have noticeable changes depending on the wire length. As illustrated in this research, advanced 3-D technologies could contribute to product engineering and customization in the apparel industry.


1864 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 204-217

The experiments upon which I have been engaged for some time past, in connexion with the manufacture and properties of gun-cotton, have brought under my notice some interesting points in the behaviour of both gun. cotton and gunpowder, when exposed to high temperatures, under parti­cular conditions. I believe that these phenomena have not been previously observed, at any rate to their full extent, and I therefore venture to lay before the Royal Society a brief account of them. Being anxious to possess some rapid method of testing the uniformity of products obtained by carrying out General von Lenk’s system of manu­facture of gun-cotton, I instituted experiments for the purpose of ascer­taining whether, by igniting equal weights of gun-cotton of the same com­position, by voltaic agency, within a partially exhausted vessel connected with a barometric tube, I could rely upon obtaining a uniform depression of the mercurial column, in different experiments made in atmospheres of uniform rarefaction, and whether slight differences in the composition of the gun-cotton would be indicated, with sufficient accuracy, by a corre­sponding difference in the volume of gas disengaged, or in the depression of the mercury. I found that, provided the mechanical condition of the gun-cotton, and its position with reference to the source of heat, were in all instances the same, the indications furnished by these experiments were sufficiently accurate for practical purposes. Each experiment was made with fifteen grains of gun-cotton, which were wrapped compactly round the platinum wire; the apparatus was exhausted until the column of mercury was raised to a height varying from 29 inches to 29·5 inches. The flash which accompanied the deflagration of the gun-cotton was apparently similar to that observed upon its ignition in open air ; but it was noticed that an interval of time always occurred between the first application of heat (or incandescence of the wire) and the flashing of the gun-cotton, and that during this interval there was a very perceptible fall of the column of mercury. On several occasions, when the gun-cotton, in the form of “roving,” or loosely twisted strand, was only laid over the wire, so that it hung down on either side, the red-hot wire simply cut it into two pieces, which fell to the bottom of the exhausted vessel, without continuing to burn. As these results appeared to indicate that the effects of heat upon gun-cotton, in a highly rarefied atmosphere, differed importantly from those observed under ordinary circumstances, or in a very imperfect va­cuum, a series of experiments, under variously modified conditions, was instituted, of which the following are the most important.


1967 ◽  
Vol 71 (681) ◽  
pp. 657-658 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. Bond ◽  
A. M. Porter

Summary:—This note describes how a single constant temperature hot wire may be used for measurements of direction, velocity and turbulence in a two-dimensional flow. The wire probe is rotated by a servo motor which automatically sets the wire with its axis either in the stream direction or normal to the flow. The accuracy of setting the wire in the direction of the stream is about , and across the stream is about 1°. If the higher accuracy is demanded the velocity and turbulence measurements require a second setting of the probe, at 90° to the previous one. When less precision is acceptable, the angle, velocity and turbulence measurements may be taken at the single setting, normal to the stream.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (supp01) ◽  
pp. 1344010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. G. ZHENG ◽  
Y. T. ZHAO ◽  
H. F. YE ◽  
H. W. ZHANG ◽  
Y. F. FU

In this paper, atomistic simulations have been conducted to investigate the torsional mechanical behaviors of five-fold twinned nanowires (FTNs), including the torsional vibration properties, elasto-plastic deformation behaviors and activation process of the first partial dislocation nucleation. Simulation results show that the fundamental torsional vibration frequency is inversely proportional to the wire length and is independent of the wire radius. Provided that an effective shear modulus of FTNs is used, the classic elastic torsional theory may be applicable to nanoscale. Furthermore, it is found that the plastic deformation of FTNs is dominated by partial dislocation activities. The normalized critical torsional angle corresponding to the onset of plastic deformation increases with the decrease of the wire radius and temperature, while it is almost independent of the wire length and loading rate. In addition, the activation energy of the first partial dislocation nucleation is about several electric voltages and decreases with the increase of the wire radius and applied torsional load.


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