Tomographic-PIV Survey of the Near-Field Hydrodynamic and Hydroacoustic Characteristics of a Marine Propeller

2015 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 201-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Felli ◽  
Massimo Falchi ◽  
Giulio Dubbioso
2015 ◽  
Vol 59 (04) ◽  
pp. 201-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Felli ◽  
Massimo Falchi ◽  
Giulio Dubbioso

This article deals with a pioneering application of tomographic particle image velocimetry (tomographic PIV) for the hydrodynamic and hydroacoustic analysis of a marine propeller. The hydrodynamic study was mainly focused on the topological analysis of the propeller wake characteristics in the near field based on the vorticity field and on the tilting and stretching terms of the vorticity transport equation. Hydroacoustic analysis concerned the use of tomographic PIV in combination with the Powell's acoustic analogy. Tomographic PIV proved to be a valid tool for the detailed quantitative reconstruction of the complex vortex topology in the propeller wake and provided an accurate description of the source terms of the Powell's analogy. In particular, it was shown that the tip vortex perturbation represents the dominant nonlinear contribution to the radiated far-field noise in non-cavitating flow conditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 70 ◽  
pp. 363-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey V. Alekseenko ◽  
Sergey S. Abdurakipov ◽  
Mikhail Y. Hrebtov ◽  
Mikhail P. Tokarev ◽  
Vladimir M. Dulin ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vedanth Nair ◽  
Matthew D. Sirignano ◽  
Sara Schmidheiser ◽  
Lane Dillon ◽  
Christopher A. Fugger ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Adrian Spencer ◽  
Mark Brend ◽  
Daniel Butcher ◽  
David Dunham ◽  
Liangta Cheng ◽  
...  

The isothermal flow fields of injectors have undergone several computational and experimental investigations using point and planar measurement techniques,. Within the swirl induced vortex breakdown region it is only LES that has been able to predict fully the presence of a three dimensional helical vortex structure for a particular injector, and in certain conditions (no central fuel jet), a precessing vortex core. These structures can be elucidated from point and planar measurements and favorable comparisons of velocity statistics between experiment and LES predictions strengthen these findings. However, volumetric, 3-component measurement of velocity data has not been widely available to provide conclusive evidence of the exact three dimensional nature of the vortex structures that exist. An experimental setup utilizing time resolved tomographic PIV on a water flow rig is described in this paper. This is used to provide as high-quality aerodynamic study as possible of a single stream radially-fed air swirl gaseous fuel injector. The level of accuracy of the tomographic PIV technique is demonstrated by calculating the divergence of the velocity field as well as validating the results against a comprehensive 2 and 3 component standard PIV velocity database and other measurement techniques and predictions. Structure identification methods have been employed to visualise and understand the complex flow topology within the near field of the injector. The change in topology with and without the stabilising central jet is further investigated and agrees with findings of planar PIV results. While the velocity error associated with the tomo-PIV results is higher than the planar results the data agree well within the identified uncertainty bounds and are complimentary in understanding the flow field structure. Thus a full volumetric aerodynamic survey is available for the first time on this isothermal flow case.


Author(s):  
E. Betzig ◽  
A. Harootunian ◽  
M. Isaacson ◽  
A. Lewis

In general, conventional methods of optical imaging are limited in spatial resolution by either the wavelength of the radiation used or by the aberrations of the optical elements. This is true whether one uses a scanning probe or a fixed beam method. The reason for the wavelength limit of resolution is due to the far field methods of producing or detecting the radiation. If one resorts to restricting our probes to the near field optical region, then the possibility exists of obtaining spatial resolutions more than an order of magnitude smaller than the optical wavelength of the radiation used. In this paper, we will describe the principles underlying such "near field" imaging and present some preliminary results from a near field scanning optical microscope (NS0M) that uses visible radiation and is capable of resolutions comparable to an SEM. The advantage of such a technique is the possibility of completely nondestructive imaging in air at spatial resolutions of about 50nm.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stuart Gregson ◽  
John McCormick ◽  
Clive Parini

Author(s):  
Daqing Cui ◽  
Ylva Ranebo ◽  
Jeanett Low ◽  
Vincenzo Rondinella ◽  
Jinshan Pan ◽  
...  
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