scholarly journals Spectroscopy in optical technology. XI. Fast-response optical detectors for time-resolved molecular spectroscopy.

1989 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 391-407
Author(s):  
Hidehiro KUME ◽  
Katsuyuki KINOSHITA ◽  
Naoto TAMAI ◽  
Iwao YAMAZAKI
2009 ◽  
Vol 132 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Schennach ◽  
J. Woisetschläger ◽  
B. Paradiso ◽  
G. Persico ◽  
P. Gaetani

This paper presents an experimental investigation of the flow field in a high-pressure transonic turbine with a downstream vane row (1.5 stage machine) concerning the airfoil indexing. The objective is a detailed analysis of the three-dimensional aerodynamics of the second vane for different clocking positions. To give an overview of the time-averaged flow field, five-hole probe measurements were performed upstream and downstream of the second stator. Furthermore in these planes additional unsteady measurements were carried out with laser Doppler velocimetry in order to record rotor phase-resolved velocity, flow angle, and turbulence distributions at two different clocking positions. In the planes upstream of the second vane, the time-resolved pressure field has been measured by means of a fast response aerodynamic pressure probe. This paper shows that the secondary flows of the second vane are significantly modified by the different clocking positions, in connection with the first vane modulation of the rotor secondary flows. An analysis of the performance of the second vane is also carried out, and a 0.6% variation in the second vane loss coefficient has been recorded among the different clocking positions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 134 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Mansour ◽  
N. Chokani ◽  
A. I. Kalfas ◽  
R. S. Abhari

An accurate assessment of unsteady interactions in turbines is required, so that this may be taken into account in the design of the turbine. This assessment is required since the efficiency of the turbine is directly related to the contribution of unsteady loss mechanisms. This paper presents unsteady entropy measurements in an axial turbine. The measurements are conducted at the rotor exit of a one–and-one-half-stage unshrouded turbine that is representative of a highly loaded, high-pressure stage of an aero-engine. The unsteady entropy measurements are obtained using a novel miniature fast-response probe, which has been developed at ETH Zurich. The entropy probe has two components: a one-sensor fast-response aerodynamic probe and a pair of thin-film gauges. The probe allows the simultaneous measurement of the total temperature and the total pressure from which the time-resolved entropy field can be derived. The measurements of the time-resolved entropy provide a new insight into the unsteady loss mechanisms that are associated with the unsteady interaction between rotor and stator blade rows. A particular attention is paid to the interaction effects of the stator wake interaction, the secondary flow interaction, and the potential field interaction on the unsteady loss generation at the rotor exit. Furthermore, the impact on the turbine design of quantifying the loss in terms of the entropy loss coefficient, rather than the more familiar pressure loss coefficient, is discussed in detail.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 157 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Frankman ◽  
Brent W. Webb ◽  
Bret W. Butler ◽  
Daniel Jimenez ◽  
Jason M. Forthofer ◽  
...  

Time-resolved irradiance and convective heating and cooling of fast-response thermopile sensors were measured in 13 natural and prescribed wildland fires under a variety of fuel and ambient conditions. It was shown that a sensor exposed to the fire environment was subject to rapid fluctuations of convective transfer whereas irradiance measured by a windowed sensor was much less variable in time, increasing nearly monotonically with the approach of the flame front and largely declining with its passage. Irradiance beneath two crown fires peaked at 200 and 300 kW m–2, peak irradiance associated with fires in surface fuels reached 100 kW m–2 and the peak for three instances of burning in shrub fuels was 132 kW m–2. The fire radiative energy accounted for 79% of the variance in fuel consumption. Convective heating at the sensor surface varied from 15% to values exceeding the radiative flux. Detailed measurements of convective and radiative heating rates in wildland fires are presented. Results indicate that the relative contribution of each to total energy release is dependent on fuel and environment.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Persico ◽  
A. Mora ◽  
P. Gaetani ◽  
M. Savini

In this paper the three-dimensional unsteady aerodynamics of a low aspect ratio, high pressure turbine stage are studied. In particular, the results of fully unsteady three-dimensional numerical simulations, performed with ANSYS-CFX, are critically evaluated against experimental data. Measurements were carried out with a novel three-dimensional fast-response pressure probe in the closed-loop test rig of the Laboratorio di Fluidodinamica delle Macchine of the Politecnico di Milano. An analysis is first reported about the strategy to limit the CPU and memory requirements while performing three-dimensional simulations of blade row interaction when the rotor and stator blade numbers are prime to each other. What emerges as the best choice is to simulate the unsteady behavior of the rotor alone by applying the stator outlet flow field as a rotating inlet boundary condition (scaled on the rotor blade pitch). Thanks to the reliability of the numerical model, a detailed analysis of the physical mechanisms acting inside the rotor channel is performed. Two operating conditions at different vane incidence are considered, in a configuration where the effects of the vortex-blade interaction are highlighted. Different vane incidence angles lead to different size, position, and strength of secondary vortices coming out from the stator, thus promoting different interaction processes in the subsequent rotor channel. However some general trends can be recognized in the vortex-blade interaction: the sense of rotation and the spanwise position of the incoming vortices play a crucial role on the dynamics of the rotor vortices, determining both the time-mean and the time-resolved characteristics of the secondary field at the exit of the stage.


2004 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Lavorel ◽  
Ha Tran ◽  
Edouard Hertz ◽  
Olivier Faucher ◽  
Pierre Joubert ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 527-535 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pascal Ko¨ppel ◽  
Christian Roduner ◽  
Peter Kupferschmied ◽  
Georg Gyarmathy

Typically several hundred million data points arise from a comprehensive measurement campaign carried out in a centrifugal compressor test rig with the fast-response aerodynamic probe system (see Part 1). In order to obtain a maximum of information about the unsteady flow at any position in this turbomachine, the time-resolved data processing method has to be optimized. In contrast to the standard time-averaged flow measurements with pneumatic probes, the objective of fast-response aerodynamic probe measurements and of data processing is to extract novel information about crucial unsteady phenomena like turbulence, row-to-row interaction, modal or rotating stall, leakage flow effects, etc. In such cases, the simultaneous measurement of static and total pressures and flow vectors is of particular interest. Novel information means the analysis of averaged and time-resolved (wavelet) spectra, autocorrelations or time averages properly conserving physical fluxes, etc. Different averaging methods are applied to compress the time-dependent data measured by a one-sensor-probe (see Part 2) in a centrifugal compressor. Such results could be used for comparison with pneumatic sensor measurements and CFD calculations. The comparison of averaging methods includes the averaging theories by Traupel and by Dzung, which are compared to simple arithmetic time averaging. From there the specific stage work is calculated. In analyzing the time dependency, several ensemble-averaging procedures for flow pressure and velocity are utilized for separating deterministic from stochastic fluctuations, extracting blade row finger prints or investigating low-frequency surge type fluctuations. With respect to the selection and overall optimization of data processing methods, an overview of generic tools is given and the modularity of the processing procedures is discussed. [S0889-504X(00)01203-4]


2000 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1036-1054 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Kupferschmied ◽  
Pascal Köppel ◽  
William Gizzi ◽  
Christian Roduner ◽  
Georg Gyarmathy

Author(s):  
Ken-ichi Funazaki ◽  
Nobuaki Tetsuka ◽  
Tadashi Tanuma

This paper, Part II of the study on wake-passing effect upon the aerodynamic performance of the turbine cascade, demonstrates the detailed measurements of the time-varying flow field downstream of the turbine cascade as well as of the moving bars. The experiment employs a single hot-wire probe to measure pitchwise distributions of the ensemble-averaged velocity at the blade midspan. The resultant data consequently provide clear images of the incident bar wakes that are bowed and directed to the suction side of the blade wake. A custom-made total pressure probe, instrumented with a miniature fast-response pressure transducer, are also adopted to understand time-resolved feature of the wake-affected stagnation pressure fields downstream of the cascade. Furthermore, a decay process of the bar wake through the test cascade is examined in detail, which serves for the discussion related to wake recovery and its impact on the stage loss.


Author(s):  
M. Mansour ◽  
N. Chokani ◽  
A. I. Kalfas ◽  
R. S. Abhari

An accurate assessment of unsteady interactions in turbines is required, so that this may be taken into account in the design of the turbine. This assessment is required since the efficiency of the turbine is directly related to the contribution of unsteady loss mechanisms. This paper presents unsteady entropy measurements in an axial turbine. The measurements are conducted at the rotor exit of a one-and-1/2-stage, unshrouded turbine that is representative of a highly loaded, high-pressure stage of an aero-engine. The unsteady entropy measurements are obtained using a novel miniature fast-response probe, which has been developed at ETH Zurich. The entropy probe has two components: a one-sensor fast response aerodynamic probe and a pair of thin-film gauges. The probe allows the simultaneous measurement of total temperature and total pressure from which the time-resolved entropy field can be derived. The measurements of the time resolved entropy provide a new insight into the unsteady loss mechanisms that are associated with the unsteady interaction between rotor and stator blade rows. A particular attention is paid to the interaction effects of the stator wake interaction, the secondary flow interaction and the potential field interaction on the unsteady loss generation at the rotor exit. Furthermore, the impact on turbine design of quantifying the loss in terms of the entropy loss coefficient, rather than the more familiar pressure loss coefficient, is discussed in detail.


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