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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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Relationship between transonic cavity tones and flowfield dynamics using pulse-burst PIV

54th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting

Wagner, Justin W.; Beresh, Steven J.; Casper, Katya M.; DeMauro, Edward P.; Arunajatesan, Srinivasan A.; Henfling, John F.; Spillers, Russell W.

Mach 0.94 flow over a cavity having a length-to-depth ratio of five was explored using time-resolved particle image velocimetry (TR-PIV) with a burst-mode laser. The data were used to probe the resonance dynamics of the first three cavity (Rossiter) tones. Bandpass filtering was employed to reveal the coherent flow structure associated with each tone. The first Rossiter mode was associated with a propagation of large scale structures in the recirculation region, while the second and third modes contained organized structures consistent with convecting vortical disturbances. The wavelengths of the second and third modes were quite similar to those observed in a previous study by the current authors using phase-averaged PIV. Convective velocities computed using cross correlations in the unfiltered data showed the convective velocity increased with streamwise distance in a fashion similar to other studies. Convective velocities during cavity resonance were found to decrease with decreasing mode number, consistent with the modal activity residing in lower portions of the cavity in regions of lower local mean velocities. The convective velocity fields associated with resonance exhibited a streamwise periodicity consistent with wall-normal undulations in the resonant velocity fields; however, additional work is required to confirm this is not an analysis artifact.

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Flash X-ray measurements on the shock-induced dispersal of a dense particle curtain

Experiments in Fluids

Wagner, Justin W.; Kearney, S.P.; Beresh, Steven J.; DeMauro, Edward P.; Pruett, Brian O.

The interaction of a Mach 1.67 shock wave with a dense particle curtain is quantified using flash radiography. These new data provide a view of particle transport inside a compressible, dense gas–solid flow of high optical opacity. The curtain, composed of 115-µm glass spheres, initially spans 87 % of the test section width and has a streamwise thickness of about 2 mm. Radiograph intensities are converted to particle volume fraction distributions using the Beer–Lambert law. The mass in the particle curtain, as determined from the X-ray data, is in reasonable agreement with that given from a simpler method using a load cell and particle imaging. Following shock impingement, the curtain propagates downstream and the peak volume fraction decreases from about 23 to about 4 % over a time of 340 µs. The propagation occurs asymmetrically, with the downstream side of the particle curtain experiencing a greater volume fraction gradient than the upstream side, attributable to the dependence of particle drag on volume fraction. Bulk particle transport is quantified from the time-dependent center of mass of the curtain. The bulk acceleration of the curtain is shown to be greater than that predicted for a single 115-µm particle in a Mach 1.67 shock-induced flow.

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Results 26–35 of 35
Results 26–35 of 35