Commissioning of a 15kW Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP) torch at Sandia National Labs
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Optics Letters
Femtosecond laser electronic excitation tagging (FLEET) velocimetry is an important diagnostic technique for seedless velocimetry measurements particularly in supersonic and hypersonic flows. Typical FLEET measurements feature a single laser line and camera system to achieve one-component velocimetry along a line, although some multiple-spot and multiple-component configurations have been demonstrated. In this work, tomographic imaging is used to track the three-dimensional location of many FLEET spots. A quadscope is used to combine four unique views onto a single high-speed image intensifier and camera. Tomographic reconstructions of the FLEET emission are analyzed for three-component velocimetry from multiple FLEET spots. Glass wedges are used to create many (nine) closely spaced FLEET spots with less than 10% transmission losses. These developments lead to a significant improvement in the dimensionality and spatial coverage of a FLEET instrument with some increases in experimental complexity and data processing. Multiple-point three-component FLEET velocimetry is demonstrated in an underexpanded jet.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
AIAA Journal
This work presents measurements of liquid drop deformation and breakup time behind approximately conical shock waves and evaluates the predictive capabilities of low-order models and correlations developed using planar shock experiments. A conical shock was approximated by firing a bullet at Mach 4.5 past a vertical column of water drops with a mean initial diameter of 192 µm. The time-resolved drop position and maximum transverse dimension were characterized using backlit stereo images taken at 500 kHz. The gas density and velocity fields experienced by the drops were estimated using a Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes simulation of the bullet. Classical correlations predict drop breakup times and deformation in error by a factor of 3 or more. The Taylor analogy breakup (TAB) model predicts deformed drop diameters that agree within the confidence bounds of the ensemble-averaged experimental values using a dimensionless constant C2 = 2 compared to the accepted value C2 = 2/3. Results demonstrate existing correlations are inadequate for predicting the drop response to the three-dimensional relaxation of the flowfield downstream of a conical-like shock and suggest the TAB model results represent a path toward improved predictions.
AIAA Journal
Fluid–structure interactions were measured between a representative control surface and the hypersonic flow deflected by it. The control surface is simplified as a spanwise finite ramp placed on a longitudinal slice of a cone. The front surface of the ramp contains a thin panel designed to respond to the unsteady fluid loading arising from the shock-wave/boundary-layer interactions. Experiments were conducted at Mach 5 and Mach 8 with ramps of different angles. High-speed schlieren captured the unsteady flow dynamics and accelerometers behind the thin panel measured its structural response. Panel vibrations were dominated by natural modes that were excited by the broadband aerodynamic fluctuations arising in the flowfield. However, increased structural response was observed in two distinct flow regimes: 1) attached or small separation interactions, where the transitional regime induced the strongest panel fluctuations. This was in agreement with the observation of increased convective undulations or bulges in the separation shock generated by the passage of turbulent spots, and 2) large separated interactions, where shear layer flapping in the laminar regime produced strong panel response at the flapping frequency. In addition, panel heating during the experiment caused a downward shift in its natural mode frequencies.
AIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2023
Measurements of gas-phase temperature and pressure in hypersonic flows are important for understanding gas-phase fluctuations which can drive dynamic loading on model surfaces and to study fundamental compressible flow turbulence. To achieve this capability, femtosecond coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (fs CARS) is applied in Sandia National Laboratories’ cold-flow hypersonic wind tunnel facility. Measurements were performed for tunnel freestream temperatures of 42–58 K and pressures of 1.5–2.2 Torr. The CARS measurement volume was translated in the flow direction during a 30-second tunnel run using a single computer-controlled translation stage. After broadband femtosecond laser excitation, the rotational Raman coherence was probed twice, once at an early time where the collisional environment has not affected the Raman coherence, and another at a later time after the collisional environment has led to significant dephasing of the Raman coherent. The gas-phase temperature was obtained primarily from the early-probe CARS spectra, while the gas-phase pressure was obtained primarily from the late-probe CARS spectra. Challenges in implementing fs CARS in this facility such as changes in the nonresonant spectrum at different measurement location are discussed.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
AIAA Journal
Previous efforts determined a set of calibrated, optimal model parameter values for Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) simulations of a compressible jet in crossflow (JIC) using a $k–ε$ turbulence model. These parameters were derived by comparing simulation results to particle image velocimetry (PIV) data of a complementary JIC experiment under a limited set of flow conditions. Here, a $k–ε$ model using both nominal and calibrated parameters is validated against PIV data acquired from a much wider variety of JIC cases, including a realistic flight vehicle. The results from the simulations using the calibrated model parameters showed considerable improvements over those using the nominal values, even for cases that were not used in the calibration procedure that defined the optimal parameters. This improvement is demonstrated using a number of quality metrics that test the spatial alignment of the jet core, the magnitudes of multiple flow variables, and the location and strengths of vortices in the counter-rotating vortex cores on the PIV planes. These results suggest that the calibrated parameters have applicability well outside the specific flow case used in defining them and that with the right model parameters, RANS solutions for the JIC can be improved significantly over those obtained from the nominal model.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Optics Letters
Femtosecond laser electronic excitation tagging (FLEET) is a powerful unseeded velocimetry technique typically used to measure one component of velocity along a line, or two or three components from a dot. In this Letter, we demonstrate a dotted-line FLEET technique which combines the dense profile capability of a line with the ability to perform two-component velocimetry with a single camera on a dot. Our set-up uses a single beam path to create multiple simultaneous spots, more than previously achieved in other FLEET spot configurations. We perform dotted-line FLEET measurements downstream of a highly turbulent, supersonic nitrogen free jet. Dotted-line FLEET is created by focusing light transmitted by a periodic mask with rectangular slits of 1.6 × 40 mm2 and an edge-to-edge spacing of 0.5 mm, then focusing the imaged light at the measurement region. Up to seven symmetric dots spaced approximately 0.9 mm apart, with mean full-width at half maximum diameters between 150 and 350 µm, are simultaneously imaged. Both streamwise and radial velocities are computed and presented in this Letter.
AIAA AVIATION 2022 Forum
This work describes the development and testing of a carbon dioxide seeding system for the Sandia Hypersonic Wind Tunnel. The seeder injects liquid carbon dioxide into the tunnel, which evaporates in the nitrogen supply line and then condenses during the nozzle expansion into a fog of particles that scatter light via Rayleigh scattering. A planar laser scattering (PLS) experiment is conducted in the boundary layer and wake of a cone at Mach 8 to evaluate the success of the seeder. Second-mode waves and turbulence transition were well-visualized by the PLS in the boundary layer and wake. PLS in the wake also captured the expansion wave over the base and wake recompression shock. No carbon dioxide appears to survive and condense in the boundary layer or wake, meaning alternative seeding methods must be explored to extract measurements within these regions. The seeding system offers planar flow visualization opportunities and can enable quantitative velocimetry measurements in the future, including filtered Rayleigh scattering.
AIAA Science and Technology Forum and Exposition, AIAA SciTech Forum 2022
Measurements of gas-phase pressure and temperature in hypersonic flows are important to understanding fluid–structure interactions on vehicle surfaces, and to develop compressible flow turbulence models. To achieve this measurement capability, femtosecond coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (fs CARS) is applied at Sandia National Laboratories’ hypersonic wind tunnel. After excitation of rotational Raman transitions by a broadband femtosecond laser pulse, two probe pulses are used: one at an early time where the collisional environment has largely not affected the Raman coherence, and another at a later time after the collisional environment has led to significant J-dependent dephasing of the Raman coherence. CARS spectra from the early probe are fit for temperature, while the later CARS spectra are fit for pressure. Challenges related to implementing fs CARS in cold-flow hypersonic facilities are discussed. Excessive fs pump energy can lead to flow perturbations. The output of a second-harmonic bandwidth compressor (SHBC) is spectrally filtered using a volume Bragg grating to provide the narrowband ps probe pulses and enable single-shot CARS measurements at 1 kHz. Measurements are demonstrated at temperatures and pressures relevant to cold-flow hypersonic wind tunnels in a low-pressure cryostat with an initial demonstration in the hypersonic wind tunnel.
AIAA Science and Technology Forum and Exposition, AIAA SciTech Forum 2022
This work presents an experimental investigation of the deformation and breakup of water drops behind conical shock waves. A conical shock is generated by firing a bullet at Mach 4.5 past a vertical column of drops with a mean initial diameter of 192 µm. The time-resolved drop position and maximum transverse dimension are characterized using backlit stereo videos taken at 500 kHz. A Reynolds-Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) simulation of the bullet is used to estimate the gas density and velocity fields experienced by the drops. Classical correlations for breakup times derived from planar-shock/drop interactions are evaluated. Predicted drop breakup times are found to be in error by a factor of three or more, indicating that existing correlations are inadequate for predicting the response to the three-dimensional relaxation of the velocity and thermodynamic properties downstream of the conical shock. Next, the Taylor Analogy Breakup (TAB) model, which solves a transient equation for drop deformation, is evaluated. TAB predictions for drop diameter calculated using a dimensionless constant of C2 = 2, as compared to the accepted value of C2 = 2/3, are found to agree within the confidence bounds of the ensemble averaged experimental values for all drops studied. These results suggest the three-dimensional relaxation effects behind conical shock waves alter the drop response in comparison to a step change across a planar shock, and that future models describing the interaction between a drop and a non-planar shock wave should account for flow field variations.
AIAA Science and Technology Forum and Exposition, AIAA SciTech Forum 2022
Measurements of gas-phase pressure and temperature in hypersonic flows are important to understanding fluid–structure interactions on vehicle surfaces, and to develop compressible flow turbulence models. To achieve this measurement capability, femtosecond coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (fs CARS) is applied at Sandia National Laboratories’ hypersonic wind tunnel. After excitation of rotational Raman transitions by a broadband femtosecond laser pulse, two probe pulses are used: one at an early time where the collisional environment has largely not affected the Raman coherence, and another at a later time after the collisional environment has led to significant J-dependent dephasing of the Raman coherence. CARS spectra from the early probe are fit for temperature, while the later CARS spectra are fit for pressure. Challenges related to implementing fs CARS in cold-flow hypersonic facilities are discussed. Excessive fs pump energy can lead to flow perturbations. The output of a second-harmonic bandwidth compressor (SHBC) is spectrally filtered using a volume Bragg grating to provide the narrowband ps probe pulses and enable single-shot CARS measurements at 1 kHz. Measurements are demonstrated at temperatures and pressures relevant to cold-flow hypersonic wind tunnels in a low-pressure cryostat with an initial demonstration in the hypersonic wind tunnel.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Measurement Science and Technology
Time-resolved particle image velocimetry (TR-PIV) has become widespread in fluid dynamics. Essentially a velocity field movie, the dynamic content provides temporal as well as spatial information, in contrast to conventional PIV offering only statistical ensembles of flow quantities. From these time series arise further analyses such as accelerometry, space-time correlations, frequency spectra of turbulence including spatial variability, and derivation of pressure fields and forces. The historical development of TR-PIV is chronicled, culminating in an assessment of the current state of technology in high-repetition-rate lasers and high-speed cameras. Commercialization of pulse-burst lasers has expanded TR-PIV into more flows, including the compressible regime, and has achieved MHz rates. Particle response times and peak locking during image interrogation require attention but generally are not impediments to success. Accuracy considerations are discussed, including the risks of noise and aliasing in spectral content. Oversampled TR-PIV measurements allow use of multi-frame image interrogation methods, which improve the precision of the correlation and raise the velocity dynamic range of PIV. In combination with volumetric methods and data assimilation, a full four-dimensional description of a flow is not only achievable but becoming standardized. A survey of exemplary applications is followed by a few predictions concerning the future of TR-PIV.
The development of new hypersonic flight vehicles is limited by the physical understanding that may be obtained from ground test facilities. This has motivated the present development of a temporally and spatially resolved velocimetry measurement for Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) Hypersonic Wind Tunnel (HWT) using Femtosecond Laser Electronic Excitation Tagging (FLEET). First, a multi-line FLEET technique has been created for the first time and tested in a supersonic jet, allowing simultaneous measurements of velocities along multiple profiles in a flow. Secondly, two different approaches have been demonstrated for generating dotted FLEET lines. One employs a slit mask pattern focused into points to yield a dotted line, allowing for two- or three-component velocity measurements free of contamination between components. The other dotted-line approach is based upon an optical wedge array and yields a grid of points rather than a dotted line. Two successful FLEET measurement campaigns have been conducted in SNL’s HWT. The first effort established optimal diagnostic configurations in the hypersonic environment based on earlier benchtop reproductions, including validation of the use of a 267 nm beam to boost the measurement signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) with minimal risk of perturbing the flow and greater simplicity than a comparable resonant technique at 202 nm. The same FLEET system subsequently was reconstituted to demonstrate the ability to make velocimetry measurements of hypersonic turbulence in a realistic flow field. Mean velocity profiles and turbulence intensity profiles of the shear layer in the wake of a hypersonic cone model were measured at several different downstream stations, proving the viability of FLEET as a hypersonic diagnostic.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
AIAA Scitech 2021 Forum
Multi-frame correlation algorithms for time-resolved PIV have been shown in previous studies to reduce noise and error levels in comparison with conventional two-frame correlations. However, none of these prior efforts tested the accuracy of the algorithms in spectral space. Even should a multi-frame algorithm reduce the error of vector computations summed over an entire data set, this does not imply that these improvements are observed at all frequencies. The present study examines the accuracy of velocity spectra in comparison with simultaneous hot-wire data. Results indicate that the high-frequency content of the spectrum is very sensitive to choice of the interrogation algorithm and may not return an accurate response. A top-hat-weighted sliding sum-of-correlation is contaminated by high-frequency ringing whereas Gaussian weighting is indistinguishable from a low-pass filtering effect. Some evidence suggests the pyramid correlation modestly increases bandwidth of the measurement at high frequencies. The apparent benefits of multi-frame interrogation algorithms may be limited in their ability to reveal additional spectral content of the flow.
AIAA Scitech 2021 Forum
This study seeks to simplify the optical requirements for multi-line FLEET (Femtosecond Laser Electronic Excitation Tagging) generation by focusing the image of a periodic slit-mask with a cylindrical and spherical lens. Geometry effects on the signal were analyzed over fifteen mask iterations. The signal for each mask was found to vary with mask standoff from the focusing optics, which was optimized based on maximizing the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) for each mask. The number of generated lines was found to decrease with slit spacing while the separation of the lines increased. FLEET line spacing was determined by a constant magnification value of the imaged masks’ slit spacing. From the geometry study, two masks that produced three to five lines spaced at 0.8–1 mm apart with SNR > 4 were chosen to demonstrate the multi-line technique in a supersonic free-jet. Velocity calculations from this data showed good agreement with schlieren imaging of compressible flow structures.
AIAA Journal
The primary parameter of a standard k-ϵ model, Cμ, was calculated from stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (PIV) data for a supersonic jet exhausting into a transonic crossflow. This required the determination of turbulent kinetic energy, turbulent eddy viscosity, and turbulent energy dissipation rate. Image interrogation was optimized, with different procedures used for mean strain rates and Reynolds stresses, to produce useful turbulent eddy viscosity fields. The eddy viscosity was calculated by a least-squares fit to all components of the three-dimensional strain-rate tensor that were available from the PIV data. This eliminated artifacts and noise observed when using a single strain component. Local dissipation rates were determined via Kolmogorov’s similarity hypotheses and the second-order structure function. The eddy viscosity and dissipation rates were then combined to determine Cμ. Considerable spatial variation was observed in Cμ, with the highest values found in regions where turbulent kinetic energy was relatively ow but where turbulent mixing was important, e.g., along the high-strain jet edges and in the wake region. This suggests that use of a constant Cμ in modeling may lead to poor Reynolds stress predictions at mixing interfaces. A data-driven modeling approach that can predict this spatial variation of Cμ based on known state variables may lead to improved simulation results without the need for calibration.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Optics Letters
A simple linear configuration for multi-line femtosecond laser electronic excitation tagging (FLEET) velocimetry is used for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, to image an overexpanded unsteady supersonic jet. The FLEET lines are spaced 0.5-1.0mmapart, and up to six lines can be used simultaneously to visualize the flowfield. These lines are created using periodic masks, despite the mask blocking 25%-30%of the 10 mJ incident beam.Maps of mean singlecomponent velocity in the direction along the principal flow axis, and turbulence intensity in that same direction, are created using multi-line FLEET, and computed velocities agree well with those obtained from single-line (traditional) FLEET. Compared to traditional FLEET, multi-line FLEET offers increased simultaneous spatial coverage and the ability to produce spatial correlations in the streamwise direction. This FLEET permutation is especially well suited for short-duration test facilities.
AIAA Scitech 2020 Forum
Two techniques have extended the effective frequency limits of postage-stamp PIV, in which a pulse-burst laser and very small fields of view combine to achieve high repetition rates. An interpolation scheme reduced measurement noise, raising the effective frequency response of previous 400-kHz measurements from about 120 kHz to 200 kHz. The other technique increased the PIV acquisition rate to very nearly MHz rates (990 kHz) by using a faster camera. Charge leaked through the camera shift register at these framing rates but this was shown not to bias the measurements. The increased framing rate provided oversampled data and enabled use of multi-frame correlation algorithms for a lower noise floor, increasing the effective frequency response to 240 kHz where the interrogation window size begins to spatially filter the data. Good agreement between the interpolation technique and the MHz-rate PIV measurements was established. The velocity spectra suggest turbulence power-law scaling in the inertial subrange steeper than the theoretical-5/3 scaling, attributed to an absence of isotropy.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.
Abstract not provided.