X-ray Based Digital Image Correlation for Fluid-Structure Interactions
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Progress toward quantitative measurements and simulations of 3D, temporally resolved aerodynamic induced liquid atomization is reported. Columns of water and galinstan (liquid metal at room temperature) are subjected to a step change in relative gas velocity within a shock tube. Breakup morphologies are shown to closely resemble previous observations of spherical drops. The 3D position, size, and velocity of secondary fragments are quantified by a high-speed digital inline holography (DIH) system developed for this measurement campaign. For the first time, breakup dynamics are temporally resolved at 100 kHz close to the atomization zone where secondary drops are highly non-spherical. Experimental results are compared to interface capturing simulations using a combined level set moment of fluid approach (CLSMOF). Initial simulation results show good agreement with observed breakup morphologies and rates of deformation.
Physical Review Fluids
High-speed, time-resolved particle image velocimetry with a pulse-burst laser was used to measure the gas-phase velocity upstream and downstream of a shock wave-particle curtain interaction at three shock Mach numbers (1.22, 1.40, and 1.45) at a repetition rate of 37.5 kHz. The particle curtain was formed from free-falling soda-lime particles resulting in volume fractions of 9% or 23% at mid-height, depending on particle diameter (106-125 and 300-355 μm, respectively). Following impingement by a shock wave, a pressure difference was created between the upstream and downstream sides of the curtain, which accelerated flow through the curtain. Jetting of flow through the curtain was observed downstream once deformation of the curtain began, demonstrating a long-term unsteady effect. Using a control volume approach, the unsteady drag on the curtain was estimated from velocity and pressure data. The drag imposed on the curtain has a strong volume fraction dependence with a prolonged unsteadiness following initial shock impingement. In addition, the data suggest that the resulting pressure difference following the propagation of the reflected and transmitted shock waves is the primary component to curtain drag.
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AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
The resonance modes in Mach 0.94 turbulent flow over a cavity having a length-to-depth ratio of five were explored using time-resolved particle image velocimetry and time-resolved pressure sensitive paint. Mode-switching occurred in the velocity field simultaneous with the pressure field. The first cavity mode corresponded to large-scale motions in shear layer and in the vicinity of the recirculation region, whereas the second and third modes contained organized structures associated with shear layer vortices. Modal surface pressures exhibited streamwise periodicity generated by the interference of downstream-traveling disturbances in shear layer with upstream-traveling acoustical waves. Because of this interference, the modal velocity fields also exhibited local maxima at locations containing pressure minima and vice-versa. Modal convective (phase) velocities, based on cross-correlations of bandpass-filtered velocity fields, decreased with decreasing mode number as the modal activity resided in lower portions of the cavity. These phase velocities also exhibited streamwise periodicity caused by wave interference. The measurements demonstrate that despite the complexities inherent in compressible cavity flows, many of the most prevalent resonance dynamics can be described with simple acoustical analogies.
47th AIAA Fluid Dynamics Conference, 2017
Fluid-structure interactions were studied on a store with tunable structural natural frequencies in complex cavity flow. Different leading edge geometries, doors, and internal inserts were used to generate cavity pressure fields that were more representative of an actual aircraft bay. The store loading and response was characterized using point pressure and accelerometer measurements. These data were supplemented with high-frequency pressure-sensitive paint applied to both the store and to the cavity floor to capture the three-dimensional nature of the pressure field in the complex configurations. The natural frequencies of the store were then changed to allow a systematic study of mode matching between the structural natural frequencies and the dominant cavity tone frequencies. In the complex cavities, the store responded to the cavity resonant tones not only in the streamwise and wall-normal directions, but also the spanwise direction. That spanwise response to cavity tones was not observed for previous studies in a simple rectangular cavity, because the flow across the store width in the spanwise direction was uniform. This different behavior highlights the importance of using a representative bay geometry for prediction of the structural response of a store in a flight environment.
AIAA Journal
Pulse-burst particle image velocimetry has been used to acquire time-resolved data at 37.5 kHz of the flow over a finite-width rectangular cavity at Mach 0.8. Power spectra of the particle image velocimetry data reveal four resonance modes that match the frequencies detected simultaneously using high-frequency wall pressure sensors, but whose magnitudes exhibit spatial dependence throughout the cavity. Spatiotemporal cross correlations of velocity to pressure were calculated after bandpass filtering for specific resonance frequencies. Cross-correlation magnitudes express the distribution of resonance energy, revealing local maxima and minima at the edges of the shear layer attributable to wave interference between downstream-and upstream-propagating disturbances. Turbulence intensities were calculated using a triple decomposition and are greatest in the core of the shear layer for higher modes, where resonant energies ordinarily are lower. Most of the energy for the lowest mode lies in the recirculation region and results principally from turbulence rather than resonance. Together, the velocity-pressure cross correlations and the triple-decomposition turbulence intensities explain the sources of energy identified in the spatial distributions of power spectra amplitudes.
AIAA SciTech Forum - 55th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting
The development of the unsteady pressure field on the floor of a rectangular cavity was studied at Mach 0.9 using high-frequency pressure-sensitive paint. Power spectral amplitudes at each cavity resonance exhibit a spatial distribution with an oscillatory pattern; additional maxima and minima appear as the mode number is increased. This spatial distribution also appears in the propagation velocity of modal pressure disturbances. This behavior was tied to the superposition of a downstream-propagating shear-layer disturbance and an upstream-propagating acoustic wave of different amplitudes and convection velocities, consistent with the classical Rossiter model. The summation of these waves generates an interference pattern in the spatial pressure amplitudes and resulting phase velocity of the resonant pressure fluctuations.
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