Low-Order Reconstruction of Pore-Scale Velocity in Randomly Packed Beds based on POD analysis of Time-resolved PIV Velocity Fields

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. King ◽  
Y. Hassan ◽  
D. Nguyen
Author(s):  
Ramgopal Sampath ◽  
S. R. Chakravarthy

The thermoacoustic oscillations of a partially premixed flame stabilized in a backward facing step combustor are studied at a constant equivalence ratio in long and short combustor configurations corresponding to with and without acoustic feedback respectively. We perform simultaneous time-resolved particle image velocimetry (TR-PIV) and chemiluminescence for selected flow conditions based on the acoustic characterization in the long combustor. The acoustic characterization shows a transition in the dominant pressure amplitudes from low to high magnitudes with an increase in the inlet flow Reynolds number. This is accompanied by a shift in the dominant frequencies. For the intermittent pressure oscillations in the long combustor, the wavelet analysis indicates a switch between the acoustic and vortex modes with silent zones of relatively low-pressure amplitudes. The short combustor configuration indicates the presence of the vortex shedding frequency and an additional band comprising the Kelvin Helmholtz mode. Next, we apply the method of finite-time Lyapunov exponent (FTLE) to the time-resolved velocity fields to extract features of the Lagrangian coherent structures (LCS) of the flow. In the long combustor post transition with the time instants with dominant acoustic mode, a large-scale modulation of the FTLE boundaries over one cycle of pressure oscillation is evident. Further, the FTLEs and the flame boundaries align each other for all phases of the pressure oscillation. In the short combustor, the FTLEs indicate the presence of small wavelength waviness that overrides the large-scale vortex structure, which corresponds to the vortex shedding mode. This behaviour contrasts with the premixed flame in the short combustor reported earlier in which such large scales were found to be seldom present. The presence of the large-scale structures even in the absence of acoustic feedback in a partially premixed flame signifies its inherent unstable nature leading to large pressure amplitudes during acoustic feedback. Lastly, the FTLE boundaries provide the frequency information of the identified coherent structure and also acts as the surrogate flame boundaries that are estimated from just the velocity fields.


2013 ◽  
Vol 735 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo H. O. Hellström ◽  
Metodi B. Zlatinov ◽  
Guangjun Cao ◽  
Alexander J. Smits

AbstractTime-resolved stereoscopic PIV was used to investigate the curvature-induced structures downstream of a $90{{}^\circ} $ bend at Reynolds numbers between $20\times 1{0}^{3} $ and $115\times 1{0}^{3} $. Data were taken at three downstream locations to investigate the evolution of the structures. Snapshot proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) analysis shows that the most energetic structure is not the well-known Dean motion but a bimodal single cell structure with alternating direction of rotation, called the ‘swirl switching’ mode. The strengths of the Dean motion and the swirl-switching structures are similar, indicating that the difference in energy is related to their duration of occurrence, where the Dean motion is associated with a comparatively rapid transition between the two states in the swirl switching mode.


Author(s):  
E. Marble ◽  
C. Morton ◽  
S. Yarusevych

Vortex Induced Vibrations (VIV) of a pivoted circular cylinder with two degrees of freedom are investigated experimentally, focusing on quantifying the wake topology. Experiments are performed in a water tunnel for a pivoted cylinder with a fixed mass ratio of 10.8, moment of inertia ratio of 87.0–109.5, and a diameter-based Reynolds number of 3100. The reduced velocity was varied from 4.42 to 9.05 by varying the natural frequency of the structure. Velocity measurements were performed via time-resolved, two-component Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV), synchronized with cylinder displacement measurements. Time and phase-averaging are employed to analyze the wake development and relate it to the structural response. Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) is utilized to gain insight into the development of coherent structures in the cylinder wake. The observed shedding patterns agree well with the Morse & Williamson [1] shedding map except for the cases at the boundary between 2P and non-synchronized shedding. The results show that the cylinder follows an elliptical trajectory with equal frequency of oscillation in streamwise and transverse directions. For the 2P regime, the tilt and direction of trajectory affect the formation and development of vortices in the wake. This results in a distinct asymmetry about the wake centerline in time-averaged statistics.


2013 ◽  
Vol 729 ◽  
pp. 603-637 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Cardillo ◽  
Yi Chen ◽  
Guillermo Araya ◽  
Jensen Newman ◽  
Kenneth Jansen ◽  
...  

AbstractA pioneer direct numerical simulation (DNS) of a turbulent boundary layer at $R{e}_{\theta } = 2077{{\unicode{x2013}}}2439$, was performed, on a rough surface and with a zero pressure gradient (ZPG). The boundary layer was subjected to transitional, 24-grit sandpaper surface roughness, with a roughness parameter of ${k}^{+ } \simeq 11$. The computational method involves a synergy of the dynamic multi-scale approach devised by Araya et al. (2011) for prescribing inlet turbulent boundary conditions and a new methodology for mapping high-resolution topographical surface data into a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) environment. It is shown here that the dynamic multi-scale approach can be successfully extended to simulations which incorporate surface roughness. The DNS results demonstrate good agreement with the laser Doppler anemometry (LDA) measurements performed by Brzek et al. (2008) and Schultz & Flack (2003) under similar conditions in terms of mean velocity profiles, Reynolds stresses and flow parameters, such as the skin friction coefficient, boundary and momentum thicknesses. Further, it is demonstrated that the effects of the surface roughness on the Reynolds stresses, at the values of $R{e}_{\theta } = 2077{{\unicode{x2013}}}2439$, are scale-dependent. Roughness effects were mainly manifested up to $y/ \delta \approx 0. 1$. Generally speaking, it was observed that inner peak values of Reynolds stresses increased when considering outer units. However, decreases were seen in inner units. In the outer region, the most significant differences between the present DNS smooth and rough cases were computed in the wall-normal component $\langle {v}^{\prime 2} \rangle $ of the Reynolds stresses and in the Reynolds shear stresses $\langle {u}^{\prime } {v}^{\prime } \rangle $ in outer units. From the resulting flow fields a proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) analysis is performed and the effects of the surface roughness are distinctly observed in the most energetic POD modes. The POD analysis shows that the surface roughness causes a redistribution of the kinetic energy amongst the POD modes with energy being shifted from low-order to high-order modes in the rough case versus the smooth case. Also, the roughness causes a marked decrease in the characteristic wavelengths observed in the POD modes, particularly in the streamwise component of the velocity field. Low-order modes of the streamwise component demonstrated characteristic wavelengths of the order of $3\delta $ in the smooth case, whereas the same modes for the rough case demonstrated characteristic wavelengths of only $\delta $.


Author(s):  
Gherardo Zambonini ◽  
Xavier Ottavy ◽  
Jochen Kriegseis

This paper considers the inherent unsteady behavior of the three dimensional separation in the corner region of a subsonic linear compressor cascade equipped of thirteen NACA 65-009 profile blades. Detailed experimental measurements were carried out at different sections in spanwise direction achieving, simultaneously, unsteady wall pressure signals on the surface of the blade and velocity fields by time-resolved PIV measurements. Two configurations of the cascade were investigated with an incidence of 4° and 7°, both at Re = 3.8 * 105 and Ma = 0.12 at the inlet of the facility. The intermittent switch between the two statistical preferred sizes of separation, large and almost suppressed, is called bimodal behaviour. The existence of such oscillation, reported at first in previous experimental and numerical works on the same test rig, is confirmed for both incidences. Additionally, the present PIV measurements provide, for the first time, time-resolved flow visualizations of the size switch of the separation with an extended field of view covering the entire blade section. The interaction of random large structures of the incoming boundary layer with the blade is found to be a predominant element that destabilizes the separation boundary. The recirculation region enlarges when these high vorticity perturbations blend with larger eddies situated in the aft part of the blade. Such massive separation persists until the blockage in the passage causes the breakdown of the largest structures in the aft part of the blade. The flow starts again to accelerate and the separation is almost suppressed. Finally, POD analysis is carried out to decompose flow modes and to contribute to the clarification of underlying cause-effect-relations, which predominate the dynamics of the present flow scenario.


2018 ◽  
Vol 839 ◽  
pp. 313-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Crawley ◽  
Lior Gefen ◽  
Ching-Wen Kuo ◽  
Mo Samimy ◽  
Roberto Camussi

This work aims to study the dynamics of and noise generated by large-scale structures in a Mach 0.9 turbulent jet of Reynolds number $6.2\times 10^{5}$ using plasma-based excitation of shear layer instabilities. The excitation frequency is varied to produce individual or periodic coherent ring vortices in the shear layer. First, two-point cross-correlations are used between the acoustic near field and far field in order to identify the dominant noise source region. The large-scale structure interactions are then investigated by stochastically estimating time-resolved velocity fields using time-resolved near-field pressure traces and non-time-resolved planar velocity snapshots (obtained by particle image velocimetry) by means of an artificial neural network. The estimated time-resolved velocity fields show multiple mergings of large-scale structures in the shear layer, and indicate that disintegration of coherent ring vortices is the dominant aeroacoustic source mechanism for the jet studied here. However, the merging of vortices in the initial shear layer is also identified as a non-trivial noise source mechanism.


AIChE Journal ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 1377-1389 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karsten E. Thompson ◽  
H. Scott Fogler

1989 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 51-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald H. Kaitchuck

AbstractTime-resolved spectroscopy during the eclipse of short-period Algol systems, has shown their accretion disks to be small, turbulent structures with non-Keplerian velocity fields and asymmetries between the leading and trailing sides of the disk. These transient disks are produced by the impact of the gas stream on the mass-gaining star, and occur in systems where the star is just large enough to ensure the stream collision is complete. These emission line disks and the excess continuum emission do not always occur together. The permanent accretion disks in at least a few of the long-period Algol systems have features in common with the transient disks including non-Keplerian velocity fields.


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