Multi-resolution, time-resolved PIV measurements of a Decelerating Turbulent Boundary Layer near Separation

Authors

  • Christian E Willert DLR Institute of Propulsion Technology, German Aerospace Center
  • Matteo Novara DLR Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology, German Aerospace Center
  • Daniel Schanz DLR Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology, German Aerospace Center
  • Reinhard Geisler DLR Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology, German Aerospace Center
  • Michael Schroll DLR Institute of Propulsion Technology, German Aerospace Center
  • Simon Ribergard Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark (DTU)
  • Andreas Schroeder DLR Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology, German Aerospace Center

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18409/ispiv.v1i1.77

Keywords:

Boundary Layers, highspeed PIV, turbulent boundary layer, flow separation, adverse pressure gradient, turbulence statistics

Abstract

We report on measurements of the time-evolving velocity profile of a turbulent boundary layer subjected to a strong adverse pressure gradient (APG) at Reynolds numbers up to Reθ ≈ 55 000 with an upstream friction Reynolds number exceeding Reτ ≈ 10 000. Near the point of flow separation high-resolution imaging at high camera frame rates captured the time evolving velocity profile using the so-called “profile-PIV” technique in a nested imaging configuration of two cameras operating at different image magnifications. One camera used an image magnification better than unity to resolve the viscous scales directly at the wall while the remainder of the roughly 200 mm thick boundary layer is simultaneous captured by the second camera. In the APG the variance of the stream-wise velocity exhibits no “inner peak” commonly found in turbulent boundary layers without pressure gradient influence. Spectral analysis further shows that the peak energy within the boundary layer shifts away from the wall toward lower frequencies. The overlap between the simultaneously imaged areas allows to assess and, to first order, correct for the effect of spatial smoothing on statistical quantities, spectra and related quantities. A multi-frame cross-correlation algorithm was used to process the extensive data base. In addition, a newly developed 2D-2C “Shake-The-Box” algorithm (STB) provided highly resolved particle tracking data beyond the reach of conventional PIV processing.

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Published

2021-08-01

Issue

Section

Boundary Layers