scholarly journals Measurements of Unsteady Flow Over and Heat Transfer From a Flat Plate

Author(s):  
X. Liu ◽  
W. Rodi

A detailed experimental investigation is described of unsteady flow over and heat transfer from a flat plate. The oncoming 2-D periodic unsteady flow was generated by a squirrel cage device mounted upstream of the plate. Velocity measurements were carried out in the free stream over the plate and in the boundary layer by hot-wire anemometers, and the distributions of pressure and heat transfer coefficient along the plate surface were measured, the latter with a glue-on hot film. All results are presented in ensemble averaged form so that the unsteady flow processes can be studied phase by phase.

2014 ◽  
Vol 137 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Fouladi ◽  
P. Henshaw ◽  
D. S.-K. Ting

An experimental investigation was carried out to study the turbulent flow over a flat plate in a wind tunnel. The turbulence was generated by a plate with diamond-shaped perforations mounted perpendicular to and on the leading edge of the flat plate. Unlike conventional grid turbulence studies, this perforated plate had a finite height, and this height was explored as a key independent parameter. Instantaneous velocity measurements were performed with a 1D hot-wire anemometer to reveal the behavior of the flow a short distance downstream of the perforated plate (X/D = 10–30). Different perforated plate heights (H = 3, 7, 11 cm) and free stream velocities (U = 4.5, 5.5, 6.5 m/s) have been studied.


Author(s):  
X. Liu ◽  
W. Rodi

A detailed experimental study has been conducted on the wake-induced unsteady flow and heat transfer in a linear turbine cascade. The unsteady wakes with passing frequencies in the range zero to 240 Hz were generated by moving cylinders on a squirrel cage device. The velocity fields in the blade-to-blade flow and in the boundary layers were measured with hot-wire anemometers, the surface pressures with a pressure transducer and the heat transfer coefficients with a glue-on hot film. The results were obtained in ensemble-averaged form so that periodic unsteady processes can be studied. Of particular interest was the transition of the boundary layer. The boundary layer remained laminar on the pressure side in all cases and in the case without wakes also on the suction side. On the latter, the wakes generated by the moving cylinders caused transition, and the beginning of transition moves forward as the cylinder-passing frequency increases. Unlike in the flat-plate study of Liu and Rodi (1991a) the instantaneous boundary layer state does not respond to the passing wakes and therefore does not vary with time. The heat transfer increases under increasing cylinder-passing frequency even in the regions with laminar boundary layers due to the increased background turbulence.


Author(s):  
R. E. Mayle ◽  
K. Dullenkopf

A theory for transition from laminar to turbulent flow as the result of unsteady, periodic passing of turbulent wakes in the free stream is developed using Emmons’ transition model. Comparisons made to flat plate boundary layer measurements and airfoil heat transfer measurements confirm the theory.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 30-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farouk Kebir ◽  
Azzeddine Khorsi

Film cooling is vital for gas turbine blades to protect them from thermal stresses and high temperatures due to the hot gas flow in the blade surface. Film cooling is applied to almost all external surfaces associated with aerodynamic profiles that are exposed to hot combustion gases such as main bodies, end-walls, blade tips and leading edges. In a review of the literature, it was found that there are strong effects of free-stream turbulence, surface curvature and hole shape on film cooling performance also blowing ratio. The performance of the film cooling is difficult to predict due to the inherent complex flow fields along the surfaces of the airfoil components in the turbine engines. From all what we introducing the film cooling is reviewed through a discussion of the analyses methodologies, a physical description, and the various influences on film-cooling performance. Initially Computational analysis was done on a flat plate with hole inclined at 55° to the surface plate. This study focuses on the efficient computation of film cooling flows with three blowing ratio. The numerical results show the effectiveness cooling and heat transfer behavior with increasing injection blowing ratio M (0.5, 1, and 1.5). The influence of increased blade film cooling can be assessed via the values of Nusselt number in terms of reduced heat transfer to the blade. Predictions of film effectiveness are compared with experimental results for a circular jet at blowing ratios ranging from 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5. The present results are obtained at a free stream turbulence of 10%, which are the typical conditions upstream of the effectiveness is generally lower for a large stream-wise angle of 55°.


Author(s):  
Osamu Terashima ◽  
Kazuhiro Onishi ◽  
Yasuhiko Sakai ◽  
Kouji Nagata

A constant temperature anemometer (CTA) is a useful instrument for measuring the velocity fluctuations in turbulent flow. However, in our calibration test, the actual frequency response of a typical CTA was no more than 5 kHz under normal laboratory conditions: for example, the diameter of the hot wire is 5 μm and the free stream velocity is 20 m/s. Therefore, in some cases, a typical CTA is not enough to measure accurately turbulent velocity fluctuations for fine scale structures. In this paper, we present a rearranged CTA circuit to obtain a faster frequency response so that in turn fine-scale structures can be more accurately investigated. A typical CTA circuit consists of a Wheatstone bridge and a feed back circuit. To improve the frequency response, the ratio of the electrical resistance of the Wheatstone bridge is set to 1 and two operational amplifiers with a gain-band width product of 100 MHz and a slew rate of 20 V/μs are used in the feedback circuit. An experiment to estimate the frequency response of the rearranged CTA circuit is performed with a free stream velocity of 20 m/s and using hot wires of diameter 5 μm and 3 μm. Experimental results show that the roll-off frequency of the rearranged CTA circuit is improved from 5 kHz to 20 kHz for the 5 μm hot wire and from 6 kHz to 40 kHz for the 3 μm hot wire. Velocity measurements are made using the rearranged CTA circuit in a plane turbulent jet where the value of the Taylor microscale λ is 3.2 mm and the Taylor-scale Reynolds number Reλ is 440. Measurements shows that the power spectrum obeys the reliable numerical profile derived by a LDIA (Lagrangian Direct-Interaction Approximation) theory until more than 0.20 of the non-dimensional wave number κ1η, which is a wider range in comparison with the results obtained when using a typical CTA circuit. Here, κ1 is the axial wave number and η is the Kolmogorov microscale. Further, velocity measurements are performed taken using the rearranged CTA circuit with a square jet where the value of λ is 6.3 mm and Reλ is 1,720. Measurements shows that the power spectrum obeys the numerical profile by the LDIA theory in the range 0.04 < κ1η < 0.20, which is a much wider range than the results obtained when using a typical CTA circuit (0.04 < κ1η < 0.08). These results indicate that the rearranged CTA circuit can be used to investigate fine-scale structures in turbulent flows more accurately.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norfifah Bachok ◽  
Anuar Ishak ◽  
Ioan Pop

The steady boundary layer flow and heat transfer of a viscous fluid on a moving flat plate in a parallel free stream with variable fluid properties are studied. Two special cases, namely, constant fluid properties and variable fluid viscosity, are considered. The transformed boundary layer equations are solved numerically by a finite-difference scheme known as Keller-box method. Numerical results for the flow and the thermal fields for both cases are obtained for various values of the free stream parameter and the Prandtl number. It is found that dual solutions exist for both cases when the fluid and the plate move in the opposite directions. Moreover, fluid with constant properties shows drag reduction characteristics compared to fluid with variable viscosity.


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