Experiments on Spray from a Rolling Tire

ORAL

Abstract

A novel laboratory apparatus has been built to understand the mechanisms and statistics of droplet production for spray emerging from a rolling tire. Using high-speed imaging, water passing through a single circumferential groove was observed to leave the tire contact patch in the form of a liquid sheet of non-uniform thickness. The sheet breaks into droplets as a result of several, organized instabilities. Measurements for the breakup length of the liquid sheet showed a dependence on Weber number proportional to We$^{-1/6}$, for Weber numbers of 2700, 10900 and 24400. A technique to identify and size water droplets was developed and the distribution of droplet sizes was determined as a function of Weber number. At We = 2700, droplet sizes between 80 and 9000$\mu m$ were detected, with a mean diameter near 800$\mu m$. Both the range of droplet sizes and the mean diameter were found to decrease with increasing Weber number as (approximately) We$^{-1/2}$. Correlation Image Velocimetry (CIV) was used to estimate the distribution of droplet velocities as a function of droplet size. The spread of droplet velocities about the tire peripheral speed is strongly correlated with droplet size. The spread can be estimated by a simple physical model incorporating rigid droplets subject to gravity and drag.

*Funding provided by Michelin Americas R and D.

Authors

  • Charles Radovich

  • Fred Browand

    • University of Southern California