• Title/Summary/Keyword: Five-hole probe

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Effect of Convex Wall Curvature on Three-Dimensional Behavior of Film Cooling Jet

  • Lee, Sang-Woo;Lee, Joon-Sik;Keon Kuk
    • Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology
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    • v.16 no.9
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    • pp.1121-1136
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    • 2002
  • The flow characteristics of film coolant issuing into turbulent boundary layer developing on a convex surface have been investigated by means of flow visualization and three-dimensional velocity measurement. The Schlieren optical system with a spark light source was adopted to visualize the jet trajectory injected at 35° and 90° inclination angles. A five-hole directional pressure probe was used to measure three-dimensional mean velocity components at the injection angle of 35°. Flow visualization shows that at the 90° injection, the jet flow is greatly changed near the jet exit due to strong interaction with the crossflow. On the other hand, the balance between radial pressure gradient and centrifugal force plays an important role to govern the jet flow at the 35° injection. The velocity measurement shows that at a velocity ratio of 0.5, the curvature stabilizes downstream flow, which results in weakening of the bound vortex structure. However, the injectant flow is separated from the convex wall gradually, and the bound vortex maintains its structure far downstream at a velocity ratio of 1.98 with two pairs of counter rotating vortices.

Vortices within a Three-Dimensional Separation in an Axial Flow Stator of a Diagonal Flow Fan

  • Kinoue, Yoichi;Shiomi, Norimasa;Setoguchi, Toshiaki
    • International Journal of Fluid Machinery and Systems
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    • v.4 no.2
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    • pp.262-270
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    • 2011
  • Experimental and numerical investigations were conducted for an internal flow in an axial flow stator of a diagonal flow fan. A corner separation near the hub surface and the suction surface of a stator blade was focused on, and further, three-dimensional vortices in separated flow were investigated by the numerical analysis. At low flow rate of 80% of the design flow rate, a corner separation of the stator between the suction surface and the hub surface can be found in both experimental and calculated results. Separation vortices are observed in the limiting streamline patterns both on the blade suction and on the hub surfaces at 80% of the design flow rate in the calculated results. It also can be observed in the streamline pattern that both vortices from the blade suction surface and from the hub surface keep vortex structures up to far locations from these wall surfaces. An attempt to explain the vortices within a three-dimensional separation is introduced by using vortex filaments.

Three-dimensional flow and pressure loss of a film-cooling jets injected in spanwise direction (폭방향으로 분사되는 막냉각 제트의 3차원 유동특성 및 압력손실)

  • Lee, Sang-U;Kim,Yong-Beom
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B
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    • v.20 no.4
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    • pp.1363-1375
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    • 1996
  • Oil-film flow visualizations and three-dimensional flow measurements using a five-hole probe have been conducted to investigate three-dimensional flow characteristics and total pressure losses of a row of film-cooling jets injected in spanwise direction. For several span-to-diameter ratios, experiments are performed in the case of three velocity ratios of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5. The flow measurements show that downstream flow due to the injection is characterized by a single streamwise vortex instead of a pair of counter-rotating vortices, which appear in the case of streamwise injection, and the vortex strength strongly depends on the velocity ratio. Regardless of the velocity*y ratio, presence of the spanwise film-cooling jets always produces total pressure loss, which is pronounced when the velocity ratio is large. It has also been found that the production of the total pressure loss is closely related to the secondary vortical flow. In addition, effects of the span-to-diameter ratio on the flow and total pressure loss are discussed in detail.

The Effect of Tip Clearance Height on the Three-Dimensional Flow and Aerodynamic Loss in the Wake Region of a High-Turning Turbine Rotor Cascade (끝틈새가 선회각이 큰 터빈 동익 익렬 후류영역에서의 3차원유동 및 압력손실에 미치는 영향)

  • Kwon, Hyun-Goo;Park, Jin-Jae;Lee, Sang-Woo
    • The KSFM Journal of Fluid Machinery
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    • v.7 no.5 s.26
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    • pp.36-42
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    • 2004
  • The effect of tip clearance height on the three-dimensional flow and aerodynamic loss in the wake region of a high-turning turbine rotor cascade has been investigated with a miniature cone-type five-hole probe. Distributions of velocity magnitude, secondary velocity vectors, and total-pressure loss coefficient are presented for three tip gap-to-span ratios of h/s = 0.0, 0.5 and 1.0 percent. The result shows that with the increment of h/s, tip leakage vortex tends to be intensified and aerodynamic loss due to the leakage vortex is increased as well. In the case of h/s = 1.0 percent, aerodynamic loss in the tip-leakage flow region is found dominant in comparison with that in the passage vortex region. With increasing h/s, mass-averaged secondary loss coefficient has a greater portion in the mass-averaged total-pressure loss coefficient.

EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH FOR EVALUATING EXHAUST FLOW DISTRIBUTION FOR PZEV EXHAUST MANIFOLDS USING A SIMULATED DYNAMIC FLOW BENCH

  • Hwang, I.G.;Myung, C.L.;Kim, H.S.;Park, S.
    • International Journal of Automotive Technology
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    • v.8 no.5
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    • pp.575-581
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    • 2007
  • As current and future automobile emission regulations become more stringent, the research on flow distribution for an exhaust manifold and close-coupled catalyst(CCC) has become an interesting and remarkable subjects. The design of a CCC and exhaust manifold is a formidable task due to the complexity of the flow distribution caused by the pulsating flows from piston motion and engine combustion. Transient flow at the exhaust manifold can be analyzed with various computational fluid dynamics(CFD) tools. However, the results of such simulations must be verified with appropriate experimental data from real engine operating condition. In this study, an experimental approach was performed to investigate the flow distribution of exhaust gases for conventional cast types and stainless steel bending types of a four-cylinder engine. The pressure distribution of each exhaust sub-component was measured using a simulated dynamic flow bench and five-hole pitot probe. Moreover, using the results of the pitot tube measurement at the exit of the CCC, the flow distribution for two types of manifolds(cast type and bending type) was compared in terms of flow uniformity. Based on these experimental techniques, this study can be highly applicable to the design and optimization of exhaust for the better use of catalytic converters to meet the PZEV emission regulation.

Instrumentation for Performance Test of Turbo Compressor (터보 압축기 성능시험을 위한 계측기기 선정)

  • Park, Tae-Choon;Kang, Young-Seok;Yang, Soo-Seok
    • Aerospace Engineering and Technology
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.46-52
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    • 2008
  • The instrumentation was studied in order to measure aerodynamic performance and efficiency of a compressor as a component of a 5MW-class gas turbine for power generation. In case of an axial compressor, the distributions of static pressure on a casing can be obtained by averaging at each stage and those of total pressure and temperature in the flow field of the compressor can be measured with a Kiel temperature probe. In case of a centrifugal compressor, the static pressures at the hub and the tip, respectively, of an impeller exit are considerably different, so the pressures need to be measured at both positions and thereafter averaged. The distributions of static pressures in a diffuser and a deswirler are measured at ten positions along five streamlines in one pitch. In addition the flow field can be measured in detail by 5-hole Pitot tube in order to analyze the flow characteristics of the core flow region and wake region and the rotor-stator interaction of the compressor.

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