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Turbulent eddies in a compressible jet in crossflow measured using pulse-burst particle image velocimetry

Physics of Fluids

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

Pulse-burst Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) has been employed to acquire time-resolved data at 25 kHz of a supersonic jet exhausting into a subsonic compressible crossflow. Data were acquired along the windward boundary of the jet shear layer and used to identify turbulent eddies as they convect downstream in the far-field of the interaction. Eddies were found to have a tendency to occur in closely spaced counter-rotating pairs and are routinely observed in the PIV movies, but the variable orientation of these pairs makes them difficult to detect statistically. Correlated counter-rotating vortices are more strongly observed to pass by at a larger spacing, both leading and trailing the reference eddy. This indicates the paired nature of the turbulent eddies and the tendency for these pairs to recur at repeatable spacing. Velocity spectra reveal a peak at a frequency consistent with this larger spacing between shear-layer vortices rotating with identical sign. The spatial scale of these vortices appears similar to previous observations of compressible jets in crossflow. Super-sampled velocity spectra to 150 kHz reveal a power-law dependency of -5/3 in the inertial subrange as well as a -1 dependency at lower frequencies attributed to the scales of the dominant shear-layer eddies.

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Three-dimensional measurement of edge effects in open cavities of finite-span

46th AIAA Fluid Dynamics Conference

DeMauro, Edward P.; Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.

Volumetric measurements of the flow within four open cavities were made using stereoscopic particle image velocimetry at a freestream Mach number of 0.8. The cavities nominally had a length-to-diameter ratio, L/D = 7, along with an aspect ratio, b/L = 0.5. The three complex cavity geometries were selected to model features representative of real aircraft bays and compare them to a finite-span rectangular cavity: these included features such as leading edge and side ramps, a scooped leading edge ramp, and a jagged leading edge. Flow is drawn into the cavity at the edges due to a lack of pressure recovery within the cavity. Due to the influence of the leading edge shape and side edges, three-dimensionalities are formed within the cavities that influence the development of the Rossiter tones. In the rectangular cavity, these three-dimensionalities lead to the formation of a set of counter-rotating streamwise-oriented vortices, which create a nearly-sinusoidal, spanwise waviness within its mixing layer. The addition of leading edge and side ramps disrupt the formation of these vortical structures and displace the mixing layer vertically, reducing Rossiter modal amplitudes. The leading edge ramp accelerates the oncoming flow, resulting in a shift in the Rossiter frequencies. A scooped leading edge reintroduced streamwise vorticity, increasing cavity turbulence, whereas an overhanging jagged leading edge reduced cavity velocity fluctuations while increasing the strength of the second Rossiter mode.

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Applications of temporal supersampling in pulse-burst PIV

32nd AIAA Aerodynamic Measurement Technology and Ground Testing Conference

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; DeMauro, Edward P.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Farias, Paul A.

Time-resolved PIV has been accomplished in three high-speed flows using a pulse-burst laser: a supersonic jet exhausting into a transonic crossflow, a transonic flow over a rectangular cavity, and a shock-induced transient onset to cylinder vortex shedding. Temporal supersampling converts spatial information into temporal information by employing Taylor’s frozen turbulence hypothesis along local streamlines, providing frequency content until about 150 kHz where the noise floor is reached. The spectra consistently reveal two regions exhibiting power-law dependence describing the turbulent decay. One is the well-known inertial subrange with a slope of-5/3 at high frequencies. The other displays a-1 power-law dependence for as much as a decade of mid-range frequencies lying between the inertial subrange and the integral length scale. The evidence for the-1 power law is most convincing in the jet-in-crossflow experiment, which is dominated by in-plane convection and the vector spatial resolution does not impose an additional frequency constraint. Data from the transonic cavity flow that are least likely to be subject to attenuation due to limited spatial resolution or out-of-plane motion exhibit the strongest agreement with the-1 and-5/3 power laws. The cylinder wake data also appear to show the-1 regime and the inertial subrange in the near-wake, but farther downstream the frozen-turbulence assumption may deteriorate as large-scale vortices interact with one another in the von Kármán vortex street.

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Applications of temporal supersampling in pulse-burst PIV

32nd AIAA Aerodynamic Measurement Technology and Ground Testing Conference

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; DeMauro, Edward P.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Farias, Paul A.

Time-resolved PIV has been accomplished in three high-speed flows using a pulse-burst laser: a supersonic jet exhausting into a transonic crossflow, a transonic flow over a rectangular cavity, and a shock-induced transient onset to cylinder vortex shedding. Temporal supersampling converts spatial information into temporal information by employing Taylor’s frozen turbulence hypothesis along local streamlines, providing frequency content until about 150 kHz where the noise floor is reached. The spectra consistently reveal two regions exhibiting power-law dependence describing the turbulent decay. One is the well-known inertial subrange with a slope of-5/3 at high frequencies. The other displays a-1 power-law dependence for as much as a decade of mid-range frequencies lying between the inertial subrange and the integral length scale. The evidence for the-1 power law is most convincing in the jet-in-crossflow experiment, which is dominated by in-plane convection and the vector spatial resolution does not impose an additional frequency constraint. Data from the transonic cavity flow that are least likely to be subject to attenuation due to limited spatial resolution or out-of-plane motion exhibit the strongest agreement with the-1 and-5/3 power laws. The cylinder wake data also appear to show the-1 regime and the inertial subrange in the near-wake, but farther downstream the frozen-turbulence assumption may deteriorate as large-scale vortices interact with one another in the von Kármán vortex street.

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Unsteady pressure sensitive paint measurements of resonance properties in complex cavities

46th AIAA Fluid Dynamics Conference

Casper, Katya M.; Wagner, Justin W.; Beresh, Steven J.; Spillers, Russell W.; Henfling, John F.

In previous studies, complex cavity geometries showed higher amplitude and more three- dimensional pressure fields than simple rectangular cavities. However, those studies relied on twenty point measurements within the cavity. To further understand the development of the pressure field within complex bays, high-frequency pressure-sensitive paint (PSP) was applied to the floor of an L/D = 7 complex cavity at Mach 0.9; unsteady pressure measurements were obtained at 10 kHz. Power spectra of the PSP measurements have a spatial distribution at each cavity resonance frequency with an oscillatory pattern; additional maxima and minima appear as the mode number is increased. This behavior was tied to the superposition of a downstream propagating shear-layer disturbance and an upstream propagating acoustic wave of different amplitudes, consistent with the classical Rossiter model. Complex geometries added spanwise asymmetries to the spatial pattern and amplified specific modes. These spatially dependent features of the pressure field might be missed by point measurements of the pressure field.

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Fluid-structure interactions using controlled disturbances on a slender cone at Mach 8

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Hunter, Patrick H.

Fluid-structure interactions were studied on a 7° half-angle cone in the Sandia Hypersonic Wind Tunnel at Mach 8 over a range of freestream Reynolds numbers between 3.3 and 14.5 × 106/m. A thin panel with tunable structural natural frequencies was integrated into the cone and exposed to naturally developing boundary layers. An elevated panel response was measured during boundary-layer transition at frequencies corresponding to the turbulent burst rate, and lower vibrations were measured under a turbulent boundary layer. Controlled perturbations from an electrical discharge were then introduced into the boundary layer at varying frequencies corresponding to the structural natural frequencies of the panel. The perturbations were not strong enough to drive a panel response exceeding that due to natural transition. Instead at high repetition rates, the perturber modified the turbulent burst rate and intermittency on the cone and therefore changed the conditions for when an elevated transitional panel vibration response occurred.

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Complex geometry effects on cavity resonance

AIAA Journal

Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.; Wagner, Justin W.

The flow over an aircraft bay is often represented using a rectangular cavity; however, this simplification neglects many features of actual flight geometry that could affect the unsteady pressure field and resulting loading in the bay. To address this shortcoming, a complex cavity geometry was developed to incorporate more realistic aircraft-bay features including shaped inlets, internal cavity structure, and doors. A parametric study of these features was conducted based on fluctuating pressure measurements at subsonic and supersonic Mach numbers. Resonance frequencies and amplitudes increased in the complex geometry compared to a simple rectangular cavity that could produce severe loading conditions for store carriage. High-frequency content and dominant frequencies were generated by features that constricted the flow such as leading-edge overhangs, internal cavity variations, and the presence of closed doors. Broadband frequency components measured at the aft wall of the complex cavities were also significantly higher than in the rectangular geometry. These changes highlight the need to consider complex geometric effects when predicting the flight loading of aircraft bays.

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Response of a store with tunable natural frequencies in compressible cavity flow

Journal of Aircraft

Wagner, Justin W.; Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Hunter, Patrick H.; Spillers, Russell W.; Henfling, John F.

Fluid-structure interactions that occur during aircraft internal store carriage were experimentally explored at Mach 0.58-1.47 using a generic, aerodynamic store installed in a rectangular cavity having a length-To-depth ratio of seven. The store vibrated in response to the cavity flow at its natural structural frequencies, and it exhibited a directionally dependent response to cavity resonance frequencies. Cavity tones excited the store in the streamwise and wall-normal directions consistently, whereas the spanwise response to cavity tones was much more limited. Increased surface area associated with tail fins raised vibration levels. The store had interchangeable components to vary its natural frequencies by about 10-300 Hz. By tuning natural frequencies, mode-matched cases were explored where a prominent cavity tone frequency matched a structural natural frequency of the store. Mode matching in the streamwise and wall-normal directions produced substantial increases in peak store vibrations, though the response of the store remained linear with dynamic pressure. Near mode-matched frequencies, changes in cavity tone frequencies of only 1% altered store peak vibrations by as much as a factor of two. Mode matching in the spanwise direction did little to increase vibrations.

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Resonance characteristics of transonic flow over a rectangular cavity using pulse-burst PIV

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; DeMauro, Edward P.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.

Pulse-burst particle image velocimetry (PIV) has been used to acquire time-resolved data at 37.5 kHz of the flow over a finite-width rectangular cavity at Mach 0.6, 0.8, and 0.94. Power spectra of the PIV data reveal four resonance modes that match the frequencies detected simultaneously using high-frequency wall pressure sensors. Velocity resonances exhibit spatial dependence in which the lowest-frequency acoustic mode is active within the recirculation region whereas the three higher modes are concentrated within the shear layer. Spatio-temporal cross-correlations were calculated from velocity data first bandpass filtered for specific resonance frequencies. The low-frequency acoustic mode shows properties of a standing wave without spatial correlation. Higher resonance modes are associated with alternating coherent structures whose size and spacing decrease for higher resonance modes and increase as structures convect downstream. The convection velocity appears identical for the high-frequency resonance modes, but it too increases with downstream distance. This is in contrast to the well-known Rossiter equation, which assumes a convection velocity constant in space.

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Unsteady shock motion in a transonic flow over a wall-mounted hemisphere

AIAA Journal

Beresh, Steven J.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

Particle image velocimetry measurements have been conducted for a Mach 0.8 flow over a wall-mounted hemisphere with a strongly separated wake. The shock foot was found to typically sit just forward of the apex of the hemisphere and move within a range of about ±10 deg. Conditional averages based upon the shock foot location show that the separation shock is positioned upstream along the hemisphere surface when reverse velocities in the recirculation region are strong and is located downstream when they are weaker. The recirculation region appears smaller when the shock is located farther downstream. No correlation was detected of the incoming boundary layer with the shock position nor with the wake recirculation velocities. These observations are consistent with recent studies concluding that, for large, strong separation regions, the dominant mechanism is the instability of the separated flow rather than a direct influence of the incoming boundary layer.

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Comparison of pulse-burst PIV data to simultaneous conventional PIV data

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

Time-resolved particle image velocimetry (PIV) using a pulse-burst laser has been acquired of a supersonic jet issuing into a Mach 0.8 crossflow. Simultaneously, the final pulse pair in each burst has been imaged using conventional PIV cameras to produce an independent two-component measurement and two stereoscopic measurements. Each measurement depicts generally similar flowfield features with vorticity contours marking turbulent eddies at corresponding locations. Probability density functions of the velocity fluctuations are essentially indistinguishable but the precision uncertainty estimated using correlation statistics shows that the pulse-burst PIV data have notably greater uncertainty than the three conventional measurements. This occurs due to greater noise in the cameras and a smaller size for the final iteration of the interrogation window. A small degree of peak locking is observed in the aggregate of the pulse-burst PIV data set. However, some of the individual vector fields show peak locking to non-integer pixel values as a result of real physical effects in the flow. Even if peak locking results entirely from measurement bias, the effect occurs at too low a level to anticipate a significant effect on data analysis.

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Volumetric measurement of transonic cavity flow using stereoscopic particle image velcimetry

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

DeMauro, Edward P.; Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.

Stereoscopic particle image velocimetry was used to experimentally measure the recirculating flow within finite-span cavities of varying complex geometry at a freestream Mach number of 0.8. Volumetric measurements were made to investigate the side wall influences by scanning a laser sheet across the cavity. Each of the geometries could be classied as an open-cavity, based on L/D. The addition of ramps altered the recirculation zone within the cavity, causing it to move along the streamwise direction. Within the simple rectangular cavity, a system of counter-rotating streamwise vortices formed due to spillage from along the side wall, which caused the mixing layer to develop a steady spanwise waviness. The ramped complex geometry, due to the presence of leading edge and side ramps, appeared to suppress the formation of streamwise vorticity associated with side wall spillage, resulting in a much more two-dimensional mixing layer.

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Width effects in transonic flow over a rectangular cavity

AIAA Journal

Beresh, Steven J.; Wagner, Justin W.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.; Pruett, Brian O.

A previous experiment by the present authors studied the flow over a finite-width rectangular cavity at freestream Mach numbers 1.5–2.5. In addition, this investigation considered the influence of three-dimensional geometry that is not replicated by simplified cavities that extend across the entire wind-tunnel test section. The latter configurations have the attraction of easy optical access into the depths of the cavity, but they do not reproduce effects upon the turbulent structures and acoustic modes due to the length-to-width ratio, which is becoming recognized as an important parameter describing the nature of the flow within narrower cavities.

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Fluid-structure interactions in compressible cavity flows

Physics of Fluids

Wagner, Justin W.; Casper, Katya M.; Beresh, Steven J.; Hunter, Patrick H.; Spillers, Russell W.; Henfling, John F.; Mayes, R.L.

Experiments were performed to understand the complex fluid-structure interactions that occur during aircraft internal store carriage. A cylindrical store was installed in a rectangular cavity having a length-to-depth ratio of 3.33 and a length-to-width ratio of 1. The Mach number ranged from 0.6 to 2.5 and the incoming boundary layer was turbulent. Fast-response pressure measurements provided aeroacoustic loading in the cavity, while triaxial accelerometers provided simultaneous store response. Despite occupying only 6% of the cavity volume, the store significantly altered the cavity acoustics. The store responded to the cavity flow at its natural structural frequencies, and it exhibited a directionally dependent response to cavity resonance. Specifically, cavity tones excited the store in the streamwise and wall-normal directions consistently, whereas a spanwise response was observed only occasionally. The streamwise and wall-normal responses were attributed to the longitudinal pressure waves and shear layer vortices known to occur during cavity resonance. Although the spanwise response to cavity tones was limited, broadband pressure fluctuations resulted in significant spanwise accelerations at store natural frequencies. The largest vibrations occurred when a cavity tone matched a structural natural frequency, although energy was transferred more efficiently to natural frequencies having predominantly streamwise and wall-normal motions.

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Results 26–50 of 126
Results 26–50 of 126