Simultaneous density-field visualization and PIV of a shock-accelerated gas curtain
Autor: | Robert F. Benjamin, Peter Vorobieff, N. A. Kurnit, Paul Rightley, Kathy Prestridge |
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Rok vydání: | 2000 |
Předmět: |
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Flow visualization Physics Shock wave business.industry Computational Mechanics General Physics and Astronomy Field of view Shock (mechanics) Physics::Fluid Dynamics symbols.namesake Optics Particle image velocimetry Mach number Mechanics of Materials symbols Shock tube business Image resolution |
Zdroj: | Experiments in Fluids. 29:339-346 |
ISSN: | 1432-1114 0723-4864 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s003489900091 |
Popis: | We describe a highly-detailed experimental characterization of the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability (the impulsively driven Rayleigh-Taylor instability) (Meshkov 1969; Richtmyer 1960). In our experiment, a vertical curtain of heavy gas (SF6) flows into the test section of an air-filled, horizontal shock tube. The instability evolves after a Mach 1.2 shock passes through the curtain. For visualization, we pre-mix the SF6 with a small (∼10−5) volume fraction of sub-micron-sized glycol/water droplets. A horizontal section of the flow is illuminated by a light sheet produced by a combination of a customized, burst-mode Nd:YAG laser and a commercial pulsed laser. Three CCD cameras are employed in visualization. The “dynamic imaging camera” images the entire test section, but does not detect the individual droplets. It produces a sequence of instantaneous images of local droplet concentration, which in the post-shock flow is proportional to density. The gas curtain is convected out of the test section about 1 ms after the shock passes through the curtain. A second camera images the initial conditions with high resolution, since the initial conditions vary from test to test. The third camera, “PIV camera,” has a spatial resolution sufficient to detect the individual droplets in the light sheet. Images from this camera are interrogated using Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) to recover instantaneous snapshots of the velocity field in a small (19 × 14 mm) field of view. The fidelity of the flow-seeding technique for density-field acquisition and the reliability of the PIV technique are both quantified in this paper. In combination with wide-field density data, PIV measurements give us additional physical insight into the evolution of the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability in a problem which serves as an excellent test case for general transition-to-turbulence studies. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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