Stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (PIV) was used to measure all three instantaneous components of the velocity field in streamwise–spanwise planes of a turbulent boundary layer at Reτ=1060 (Reθ=2500). Datasets were obtained in the logarithmic layer and beyond. The vector fields in the log layer (z+=92 and 150) revealed signatures of vortex packets similar to those proposed by Adrian and co-workers in their PIV experiments. Groups of legs of hairpin vortices appeared to be coherently arranged in the streamwise direction. These regions also generated substantial Reynolds shear stress, sometimes as high as 40 times −uw. A feature extraction algorithm was developed to automate the identification and characterization of these packets of hairpin vortices. Identified patches contributed 28% to −uw while occupying only 4% of the total area at z+=92. At z+=150, these patches occupied 4.5% of the total area while contributing 25% to −uw. Beyond the log layer (z+=198 and 530), the spatial organization into packets is seen to break down.
Stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements are made in streamwisespanwise and inclined cross-stream planes (inclined at 45 • and 135 • to the principal flow direction) of a turbulent boundary layer at moderate Reynolds number (Re τ ∼ 1100). Two-point spatial velocity correlations computed using the PIV data reveal results that are consistent with an earlier study in which packets of hairpin vortices were identified by a feature-detection algorithm in the log region, but not in the outer wake region. Both streamwise-streamwise (R uu) and streamwise-wall-normal (R uw) correlations are significant for streamwise displacements of more than 1500 wall units. Zero crossing data for the streamwise fluctuating component u reveal that streamwise strips between zero crossings of 1500 wall units or longer occur more frequently for negative u than positive u, suggesting that long streamwise correlations in R uu are dominated by slower streamwise structures. Additional analysis of R ww correlations suggests that the long streamwise slow-moving regions contain discrete zones of strong upwash over extended streamwise distances, as might occur within packets of angled hairpin vortices. At a wall-normal location outside of the log region (z/δ = 0.5), the correlations are shorter in the streamwise direction and broader in the spanwise direction. Correlations in the inclined cross-stream plane data reveal good agreement with the streamwise-spanwise plane. R uu in the 45 • plane is more elongated along the in-plane wall-normal direction than in the 135 • plane, which is consistent with the presence of hairpin packets with a low-speed region lifting away from the wall.
The interaction of solid particles with the temporal features of a turbulent flow has direct relevance to problems in particle and spray combustion and the processing of particulate solids. The object of the present study was to examine the behaviour of particles in a jet dominated by vortex ring structures. An axisymmetric air jet laden with 55 μm glass particles was forced axially with an acoustic speaker to organize the vortex ring structures rolling up in the free shear layer downstream of the nozzle exit. Visualization studies of forced and unforced flow with Reynolds number of the order of 20000 were completed using a pulsed copper vapour laser. Instantaneous photographs and videotapes of strobed forced flow show that particles become clustered in the saddle regions downstream of the vortex rings and are propelled away from the jet axis by the outwardly moving flow in these regions. Phase-averaged spatial distribution of particle number density computed from digitized photographs and phase-averaged particle velocity measurements yield further evidence that local particle dispersion and concentration are governed by convection due to large-scale turbulence structures. The large-scale structures and convection mechanisms were shown to persist for particle-to-air mass loading ratios up to 0.65.
Dual-plane particle image velocimetry experiments were performed in a turbulent boundary layer with Re = 1160 to obtain all components of the velocity gradient tensor. Wall-normal locations in the logarithmic and wake region were examined. The availability of the complete gradient tensor facilitates improved identification of vortex cores and determination of their orientation and size. Inclination angles of vortex cores were computed using statistical tools such as two-point correlations and joint probability density functions. Also, a vortex identification technique was employed to identify individual cores and to compute inclination angles directly from instantaneous fields. The results reveal broad distributions of inclination angles at both locations. The results are consistent with the presence of many hairpin vortices which are most frequently inclined downstream at an angle of 45 ؠ with the wall. According to the probability density functions, a relatively small percentage of cores are inclined upstream. The number density of forward leaning cores decreases from the logarithmic to the outer region while the number density of backward-leaning cores remains relatively constant. These trends, together with the correlation statistics, suggest that the backward-leaning cores are part of smaller, weaker structures that have been distorted and convected by larger, predominantly forward-leaning eddies associated with the local shear.
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