Liquid Diffusion Measurement in Micro/Mini Channels From Full-Field Digital Phase Measurement Interferometry (PMI)

Author(s):  
Julie Garvey ◽  
David Newport ◽  
Tara Dalton

This paper considers division of amplitude interferometry as a means to extract fluid information from micro-systems. Initially the phase measurement technique is analysed and the measurement limitations of mixing measurement are assessed. Accurate phase measurements are then made of the concentration in a 3 dimensional channel flow. A mini sized channel with tow fluid flows at Reynolds numbers of 0.848 and 0.0848 is numerically analysed. The same channel is experimentally tested and the results for the mixing concentration gradients in channel flow are compared with those obtained numerically. The requirement for experimental measurement for accurate measurement of binary liquid diffusion is observed by the variation between experimental and numerical results. The diffusion coefficient measurement verifies PMI as a means of mixture measurement, or more broadly as a phase measurement technique for small-scale, or micro scale, fluidic analysis. PMI’s potential is finally discussed as a measurement technique for concentration, and hence fluidic analysis of micro channel mixing.

2009 ◽  
Vol 627 ◽  
pp. 1-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
HIROYUKI ABE ◽  
ROBERT ANTHONY ANTONIA ◽  
HIROSHI KAWAMURA

Direct numerical simulations of a turbulent channel flow with passive scalar transport are used to examine the relationship between small-scale velocity and scalar fields. The Reynolds number based on the friction velocity and the channel half-width is equal to 180, 395 and 640, and the molecular Prandtl number is 0.71. The focus is on the interrelationship between the components of the vorticity vector and those of the scalar derivative vector. Near the wall, there is close similarity between different components of the two vectors due to the almost perfect correspondence between the momentum and thermal streaks. With increasing distance from the wall, the magnitudes of the correlations become smaller but remain non-negligible everywhere in the channel owing to the presence of internal shear and scalar layers in the inner region and the backs of the large-scale motions in the outer region. The topology of the scalar dissipation rate, which is important for small-scale scalar mixing, is shown to be associated with the organized structures. The most preferential orientation of the scalar dissipation rate is the direction of the mean strain rate near the wall and that of the fluctuating compressive strain rate in the outer region. The latter region has many characteristics in common with several turbulent flows; viz. the dominant structures are sheetlike in form and better correlated with the energy dissipation rate than the enstrophy.


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (19) ◽  
pp. 3233-3246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diana V Bambill ◽  
Graciela I Guerrero ◽  
Daniel H Felix

The present study aims to provide some new information for the design of micro systems. It deals with free vibrations of Bernoulli–Euler micro beams with nonrigid supports. The study is based on the formulation of the modified couple stress theory. This theory is a nonclassical continuum theory that allows one to capture the small-scale size effects in the vibrational behavior of micro structures. More realistic boundary conditions are represented with elastic edge conditions. The effect of Poisson’s ratio on the micro beam characteristics is also analyzed. The present results revealed that the characterization of real boundary conditions is much more important for micro beams than for macro beams, and this is an assessment that cannot be ignored.


AIAA Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
James P. Hubner ◽  
Amruthkiran Hegde ◽  
Kyle Chism ◽  
Semih M. Ölçmen ◽  
Jim Crafton

Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (14) ◽  
pp. 3084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jungbeom Kim ◽  
Younsil Kim ◽  
Junesol Song ◽  
Donguk Kim ◽  
Minhuck Park ◽  
...  

In this study, we combined a time-differenced carrier phase (TDCP)-based global positioning system (GPS) with an inertial navigation system (INS) to form an integrated system that appropriately considers noise correlation. The TDCP-based navigation system can determine positions precisely based on high-quality carrier phase measurements without difficulty resolving integer ambiguity. Because the TDCP system contains current and previous information that violate the format of the conventional Kalman filter, a delayed state filter that considers the correlation between process and measurement noise is utilized to improve the accuracy and reliability of the TDCP-based GPS/INS. The results of a dynamic simulation and an experiment conducted to verify the efficacy of the proposed system indicate that it can achieve performance improvements of up to 70% and 60%, respectively, compared to the conventional algorithm.


Author(s):  
Shenq-Yuh Jaw ◽  
Robert R. Hwang ◽  
K. L. Shyu

In this study, red, green, and blue light-emitting diodes (LED) are adopted as the light source to illuminate sequentially a two-dimensional soap film channel flow. Triple-exposure particle image is recorded on the same image frame by a 3-ccd color camera. Since the particles illuminated by the R, G, B LED will only be recorded on the R, G, B ccd-chip of the digital camera, three sequential exposure, R, G, B particle images can be obtained from separating the triple-exposure particle image. Two sequential velocity fields can be determined from the correlation analysis of the R-G and G-B sequential particle images. Time derivative of the velocity fields, and hence the evolution of the unsteady flow or the characteristics of turbulent flows can be analyzed from the two velocity fields determined. The color PIV method incorporated with the LED light has proven to be a cheap, safe, and powerful tool for the full-field flow measurements. Results of the flow past circular cylinder in the confined soap film channel flow are presented.


2016 ◽  
Vol 804 ◽  
pp. 5-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alain Pumir ◽  
Haitao Xu ◽  
Eric D. Siggia

In a channel flow, the velocity fluctuations are inhomogeneous and anisotropic. Yet, the small-scale properties of the flow are expected to behave in an isotropic manner in the very-large-Reynolds-number limit. We consider the statistical properties of small-scale velocity fluctuations in a turbulent channel flow at moderately high Reynolds number ($Re_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}}\approx 1000$), using the Johns Hopkins University Turbulence Database. Away from the wall, in the logarithmic layer, the skewness of the normal derivative of the streamwise velocity fluctuation is approximately constant, of order 1, while the Reynolds number based on the Taylor scale is $R_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}}\approx 150$. This defines a small-scale anisotropy that is stronger than in turbulent homogeneous shear flows at comparable values of $R_{\unicode[STIX]{x1D706}}$. In contrast, the vorticity–strain correlations that characterize homogeneous isotropic turbulence are nearly unchanged in channel flow even though they do vary with distance from the wall with an exponent that can be inferred from the local dissipation. Our results demonstrate that the statistical properties of the fluctuating velocity gradient in turbulent channel flow are characterized, on one hand, by observables that are insensitive to the anisotropy, and behave as in homogeneous isotropic flows, and on the other hand by quantities that are much more sensitive to the anisotropy. How this seemingly contradictory situation emerges from the simultaneous action of the flux of energy to small scales and the transport of momentum away from the wall remains to be elucidated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 765-767 ◽  
pp. 2399-2402
Author(s):  
Bu Xin You ◽  
He Zhi Liu ◽  
Peng Tian ◽  
Jia Xu ◽  
Jing Bu

Based on the small scale power system frequency fluctuation frequency leakage problems due to the FFT phase measurement error problem, this paper presents a high accuracy algorithm for phase difference measurement based on windowed discrete Fourier transform, the signal truncated using 4 order Blackman-Harris window, and corrects the phase correction method for discrete spectrum thus to calculate the phase difference. The algorithm for phase difference measurement theory and signal frequency independent, so there is no need to sample the signals of the whole cycle. A simple algorithm, less calculation, high precision, has strong inhibition on the harmonic and noise, simulation results verify the feasibility and effectiveness of the algorithm.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 885-892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis King ◽  
Abdelmalek Bouazza ◽  
Anton Maksimenko ◽  
Will P. Gates ◽  
Stephen Dubsky

The measurement of displacement fields by nondestructive imaging techniques opens up the potential to study the pre-failure mechanisms of a wide range of geotechnical problems within physical models. With the advancement of imaging technologies, it has become possible to achieve high-resolution three-dimensional computed tomography volumes of relatively large samples, which may have previously resulted in excessively long scan times or significant imaging artefacts. Imaging of small-scale model piled embankments (142 mm diameter) comprising sand was undertaken using the imaging and medical beamline at the Australian Synchrotron. The monochromatic X-ray beam produced high-resolution reconstructed volumes with a fine texture due to the size and mineralogy of the sand grains as well as the phase contrast enhancement achieved by the monochromatic X-ray beam. The reconstructed volumes were well suited to the application of digital volume correlation, which utilizes cross-correlation techniques to estimate three-dimensional full-field displacement vectors. The output provides insight into the strain localizations that develop within piled embankments and an example of how advanced imaging techniques can be utilized to study the kinematics of physical models.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document