Experimental investigation into turbulent negatively buoyant jets using combined PIV and PLIF measurements
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAbstract
Turbulent negatively buoyant jets occur when the buoyancy of a jet opposes its source momentum. In these flows, the fluid will rise until it reaches a stagnation point and a return flow is established, forming a fountain (Hunt and Burridge, 2015). This study looks at both the initial ...
See moreTurbulent negatively buoyant jets occur when the buoyancy of a jet opposes its source momentum. In these flows, the fluid will rise until it reaches a stagnation point and a return flow is established, forming a fountain (Hunt and Burridge, 2015). This study looks at both the initial negatively buoyant jet stage of this flow, before the return flow has established, and the fully developed fountain stage. Two-dimensional particle image velocimetry (PIV) and planar laser in- duced fluorescence (PLIF) are used to simultaneously measure the velocity and scalar concentration fields. An experimental and image processing procedure for the PLIF is introduced that accounts for pulse-to-pulse variations in laser power and beam profile for an Nd:YAG laser, which has been demonstrated to reduce the error in scalar concentration measurements. The flow is investigated experimentally using a 1m3 tank of salt-water ambient with freshwater+ethanol negatively buoyant jets, allowing for measurements to be taken at F ro = 30 and Reo = 5900. The entrainment coefficient for a negatively buoyant jet has been estimated as α ∼= 0.054, lower than a neutral jet at α ∼= 0.058. A finding con- sistent with existing literature (Bloomfield and Kerr, 2000; McDougall, 1981).
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See moreTurbulent negatively buoyant jets occur when the buoyancy of a jet opposes its source momentum. In these flows, the fluid will rise until it reaches a stagnation point and a return flow is established, forming a fountain (Hunt and Burridge, 2015). This study looks at both the initial negatively buoyant jet stage of this flow, before the return flow has established, and the fully developed fountain stage. Two-dimensional particle image velocimetry (PIV) and planar laser in- duced fluorescence (PLIF) are used to simultaneously measure the velocity and scalar concentration fields. An experimental and image processing procedure for the PLIF is introduced that accounts for pulse-to-pulse variations in laser power and beam profile for an Nd:YAG laser, which has been demonstrated to reduce the error in scalar concentration measurements. The flow is investigated experimentally using a 1m3 tank of salt-water ambient with freshwater+ethanol negatively buoyant jets, allowing for measurements to be taken at F ro = 30 and Reo = 5900. The entrainment coefficient for a negatively buoyant jet has been estimated as α ∼= 0.054, lower than a neutral jet at α ∼= 0.058. A finding con- sistent with existing literature (Bloomfield and Kerr, 2000; McDougall, 1981).
See less
Date
2020Source title
International Journal of Heat and Fluid FlowVolume
82Issue
108561Publisher
ElsevierFunding information
ARC DP160102134Licence
Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0Faculty/School
School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic EngineeringShare