Particle Image Velocimetry Measurement and Computational Fluid Dynamic Simulations of the Unsteady Flow Within a Rotating Disk Cavity

2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiang Luo ◽  
Dongdong Liu ◽  
Hongwei Wu ◽  
Zhi Tao

In this article a combined experimental and numerical investigation of the unsteady mixing flow of the ingestion gas and rim sealing air inside a rotating disk cavity was carried out. A new test rig was set up, and the experiments were conducted on a 1.5-stage turbine rotor disk and included pressure measurements. The flow structure of the mixing region of the ingestion gas and sealing air in cavity was measured using the particle image velocimetry (PIV) technique. To complement the experimental investigation and to aid in understanding the flow mechanism within the cavity, a three-dimensional (3D) unsteady computational fluid dynamic (CFD) analysis was undertaken. Both simulated and experimental results indicated that near the rotating disk, (i) a large amount of the ingestion gas will turn around and flow out the cavity due to the impact of the centrifugal force and the Coriolis force, (ii) a small amount of ingestion gas will mix transiently with the sealing air inside the cavity, whereas near the static disk, (iii) the ingestion gas will flow into the cavity along the static wall and mix with the sealing air.

2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 340-351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter C. Schlanstein ◽  
Felix Hesselmann ◽  
Sebastian V. Jansen ◽  
Jeannine Gemsa ◽  
Tim A. Kaufmann ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mojgan Ghodrati ◽  
Thananya Khienwad ◽  
Alexander Maurer ◽  
Francesco Moscato ◽  
Francesco Zonta ◽  
...  

Intraventricular flow patterns during left ventricular assist device support have been investigated via computational fluid dynamics by several groups. Based on such simulations, specific parameters for thrombus formation risk analysis have been developed. However, computational fluid dynamic simulations of complex flow configurations require proper validation by experiments. To meet this need, a ventricular model with a well-defined inflow section was analyzed by particle image velocimetry and replicated by transient computational fluid dynamic simulations. To cover the laminar, transitional, and turbulent flow regime, four numerical methods including the laminar, standard k-omega, shear-stress transport, and renormalized group k-epsilon were applied and compared to the particle image velocimetry results in 46 different planes in the whole left ventricle. The simulated flow patterns for all methods, except renormalized group k-epsilon, were comparable to the flow patterns measured using particle image velocimetry (absolute error over whole left ventricle: laminar: 10.5, standard k-omega: 11.3, shear–stress transport: 11.3, and renormalized group k-epsilon: 17.8 mm/s). Intraventricular flow fields were simulated using four numerical methods and validated with experimental particle image velocimetry results. In the given setting and for the chosen boundary conditions, the laminar, standard K-omega, and shear–stress transport methods showed acceptable similarity to experimental particle image velocimetry data, with the laminar model showing the best transient behavior.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
James Schock ◽  
Jason Dahl

Two methods are investigated to simultaneously obtain both three-dimensional (3D) velocity field and free surface elevations (FSEs) measurements near a surface piercing foil, while limiting the equipment. The combined velocity field and FSE measurements are obtained specifically for the validation of numerical methods requiring simultaneous field data and free surface measurements for a slender body shape. Both methods use stereo particle image velocimetry (SPIV) to measure three component velocities in the flow field and both methods use an off the shelf digital camera with a laser intersection line to measure FSEs. The first method is performed using a vertical laser sheet oriented parallel to the foil chord line. Through repetition of experiments with repositioning of the laser, a statistical representation of the three-dimensional flow field and surface elevations is obtained. The second method orients the vertical laser sheet such that the foil chord line is orthogonal to the laser sheet. A single experiment is performed with this method to measure the three-dimensional three component (3D3C) flow field and free surface, assuming steady flow conditions, such that the time dimension is used to expand the flow field in 3D space. The two methods are compared using dynamic mode decomposition and found to be comparable in the primary mode. Utilizing these methods produces results that are acceptable for use in numerical methods verification, at a fraction of the capital and computing cost associated with two plane or tomographic particle image velocimetry (PIV).


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (77) ◽  
pp. 3378-3386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard J. Bomphrey ◽  
Per Henningsson ◽  
Dirk Michaelis ◽  
David Hollis

Aerodynamic structures generated by animals in flight are unstable and complex. Recent progress in quantitative flow visualization has advanced our understanding of animal aerodynamics, but measurements have hitherto been limited to flow velocities at a plane through the wake. We applied an emergent, high-speed, volumetric fluid imaging technique (tomographic particle image velocimetry) to examine segments of the wake of desert locusts, capturing fully three-dimensional instantaneous flow fields. We used those flow fields to characterize the aerodynamic footprint in unprecedented detail and revealed previously unseen wake elements that would have gone undetected by two-dimensional or stereo-imaging technology. Vortex iso-surface topographies show the spatio-temporal signature of aerodynamic force generation manifest in the wake of locusts, and expose the extent to which animal wakes can deform, potentially leading to unreliable calculations of lift and thrust when using conventional diagnostic methods. We discuss implications for experimental design and analysis as volumetric flow imaging becomes more widespread.


Author(s):  
Wael Fairouz Saleh ◽  
Ibrahim Galal Hassan

The discharge of two-phase flow from a stratified region through single or multiple branches is an important process in many industrial applications including the pumping of fluid from storage tanks, shell-and-tube heat exchangers, and the fluid flow through small breaks in cooling channels of nuclear reactors during loss-of-coolant accidents (LOCA). Knowledge of the flow phenomena involved along with the quality and mass flow rate of the discharging stream(s) is necessary to adequately predict the different phenomena associated with the process. Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) in three dimension was used to provide detailed measurements of the flow patterns involving distributions of mean velocity, vorticity field, and flow structure. The experimental investigation was carried out to simulate two phase discharge from a stratified region through branches located on a semi-circular wall configuration during LOCA scenarios. The semi-circular test section is in close dimensional resemblance with that of a CANDU header-feeder system, with branches mounted at orientation angles of zero, 45 and 90 degrees from the horizontal. The experimental data for the phase development (mean velocity, flow structure, etc.) was done during single discharge through the bottom branch from an air/water stratified region over a three selected Froude numbers. These measurements were used to describe the effect of outlet flow conditions on phase redistribution in headers and understand the entrainment phenomena.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document