Hot-wire anemometry in a hypersonic turbulent boundary layer

Author(s):  
P. MATERNA
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 9058
Author(s):  
Hidemi Takahashi ◽  
Mitsuru Kurita ◽  
Hidetoshi Iijima ◽  
Seigo Koga

This study proposes a unique approach to convert a voltage signal obtained from a hot-wire anemometry to flow velocity data by making a slight modification to existing temperature-correction methods. The approach was a simplified calibration method for the constant-temperature mode of hot-wire anemometry without knowing exact wire temperature. The necessary data are the freestream temperature and a set of known velocity data which gives reference velocities in addition to the hot-wire signal. The proposed method was applied to various boundary layer velocity profiles with large temperature variations while the wire temperature was unknown. The target flow velocity was ranged between 20 and 80 m/s. By using a best-fit approach between the velocities in the boundary layer obtained by hot-wire anemometry and by the pitot-tube measurement, which provides reference data, the unknown wire temperature was sought. Results showed that the proposed simplified calibration approach was applicable to a velocity range between 20 and 80 m/s and with temperature variations up to 15 °C with an uncertainty level of 2.6% at most for the current datasets.


2011 ◽  
Vol 677 ◽  
pp. 179-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. JACOBI ◽  
B. J. McKEON

The zero-pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layer over a flat plate was perturbed by a short strip of two-dimensional roughness elements, and the downstream response of the flow field was interrogated by hot-wire anemometry and particle image velocimetry. Two internal layers, marking the two transitions between rough and smooth boundary conditions, are shown to represent the edges of a ‘stress bore’ in the flow field. New scalings, based on the mean velocity gradient and the third moment of the streamwise fluctuating velocity component, are used to identify this ‘stress bore’ as the region of influence of the roughness impulse. Spectral composite maps reveal the redistribution of spectral energy by the impulsive perturbation – in particular, the region of the near-wall peak was reached by use of a single hot wire in order to identify the significant changes to the near-wall cycle. In addition, analysis of the distribution of vortex cores shows a distinct structural change in the flow associated with the perturbation. A short spatially impulsive patch of roughness is shown to provide a vehicle for modifying a large portion of the downstream flow field in a controlled and persistent way.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (23) ◽  
pp. 5199
Author(s):  
Hidemi Takahashi ◽  
Hidetoshi Iijima ◽  
Mitsuru Kurita ◽  
Seigo Koga

A unique approach to evaluate the reduction of skin friction drag by riblets was applied to boundary layer profiles measured in wind tunnel experiments. The proposed approach emphasized the turbulent scales based on hot-wire anemometry data obtained at a sampling frequency of 20 kHz in the turbulent boundary layer to evaluate the skin friction drag reduction. Three-dimensional riblet surfaces were fabricated using aviation paint and were applied to a flat-plate model surface. The turbulent statistics, such as the turbulent scales and intensities, in the boundary layer were identified based on the freestream velocity data obtained from the hot-wire anemometry. Those turbulent statistics obtained for the riblet surface were compared to those obtained for a smooth flat plate without riblets. Results indicated that the riblet surface increased the integral scales and decreased the turbulence intensity, which indicated that the turbulent structure became favorable for reducing skin friction drag. The proposed method showed that the current three-dimensional riblet surface reduced skin friction drag by about 2.8% at a chord length of 67% downstream of the model’s leading edge and at a freestream velocity of 41.7 m/s (Mach 0.12). This result is consistent with that obtained by the momentum integration method based on the pitot-rake measurement, which provided a reference dataset of the boundary layer profile.


1966 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 719-735 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Fiedler ◽  
M. R. Head

An improved version of Corrsin & Kistler's method has been used to measure intermittency in favourable and adverse pressure gradients, and the characteristic parameters of the intermittency have been related to the form parameterHof the mean velocity profiles.It is found that with adverse pressure gradients the centre of intermittency moves outward from the surface while the width of the intermittent zone decreases. The converse is true of favourable pressure gradients, and it seems likely that at sufficiently low values ofHthe flow over the full depth of the layer is only intermittently turbulent.A new method of intermittency measurement is presented which makes use of a photo-electric probe. Smoke is introduced into the boundary layer and illuminated by a narrow beam of parallel light normal to the surface. The photoelectric probe is focused on the illuminated region and a signal is generated when smoke passes through the focal point of the probe lens. Comparison of this signal with the output from a hot-wire at very nearly the same point shows the identity of smoke and turbulence distributions.


1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 220-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Vukoslavc˘evic´ ◽  
J.-L. Balint ◽  
J. M. Wallace

The design and construction of a miniature hot-wire probe capable of simultaneously measuring all components of the velocity and vorticity vectors in turbulent flows are presented. A brief description of the probe resolution and calibration as well as the procedure to solve the cooling equations are given. Preliminary testing in the irrotational region of the flow shows that the spurious vorticity obtained from the probe due to system measurement error does not exceed 8 percent of the RMS vorticity fluctuation levels measured over the region y+ = 15 − 45 in a turbulent boundary layer.


1975 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Ueda ◽  
J. O. Hinze

Measurements have been made concerning the fine structure of the turbulence in the part adjacent to the wall of the wall region of a plane turbulent boundary layer. The objective was to gain further information concerning the larger-scale disturbance mechanism which is mainly responsible for the generation of turbulence. Hot-wire anemomet.ry was used and information on the fine structure was obtained by differentiating and filtering the hot-wire signal.The distributions of the Kolmogorov microscale and of the flatness and skewness factors of the axial fluctuating velocity u and its first and second derivative determined at two Reynolds numbers suggest the existence of Reynolds number similarity. In the region y+ < 15 the flatness and skewness factors of u increase with decreasing y+. At approximately y+ = 15 the flatness factor shows a minimum value, while the skewness factor becomes zero. This location agrees with that where the turbulence intensity u′ has a maximum value. In the outer part of the wall region (y+ > 100) the flatness and skewness factors approach values obtained in shear-free turbulence at the same turbulence Reynolds number.The fine structure of the turbulence is strongly associated with and dominated by the random, larger-scale, intermittent inrush-ejection cycle. In the viscous sublayer both the fine structure, and the large-scale mechanism of the turbulence are influenced mainly by the inrush phase, while further out in the wall region (y+ > 40) they are influenced by both inrush and ejection. As a result, in the viscous sublayer the average burst periods of the high frequency turbulence components and their flatness factors (of ∂u/∂t and of ∂2u/∂t2) attain values twice those in the outer part.The change in the mechanism of the fine structure with distance from the wall is clearly demonstrated by the spectra of non-negative variables, i.e. (∂u/∂t)2 and (∂2u/∂t2)2. The spectra agree with each other and decrease with increasing frequency, following a power law as predicted by Gurvich & Yaglom (1967). The power law applies to almost the whole frequency range, when the highest, viscous, frequency range is excluded. However, the exponent is different for the viscous sublayer and the outer part of the wall region. In the buffer layer the spectra have two distinct power-law regions. In the lower frequency range the exponent is the same as that for the viscous sublayer, while in the higher frequency range it is the same as that for the outer part of the wall region.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document