Experimental measurements of turbulent polymer solutions

ORAL

Abstract

Complex fluids modify turbulent flows over a broad range of scales, including scales much larger than the physical size of the fluid microstructure. Models have attempted to explain this phenomenon on the basis of assumptions such as enhanced effective viscosity or a critical length scale separating different flow regimes. We attempt to constrain such models with experimental measurements of bulk turbulence in a dilute solution of long-chain polyacrylamide in water. We use high-speed cameras and Lagrangian Particle Tracking Velocimetry to image the central region of a von K\'{a}rm\'{a}n swirling flow, in which counter-rotating impellers inject kinetic energy inertially. We observe that concentrations as low as a few parts per million can drastically modify the energy cascade.

*This work is supported by the National Science Foundation

Authors

  • Alexandre de Chaumont Quitry

    • Yale University
  • Douglas Kelley

    • Yale University
    • Department of Materials Science \& Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Nicholas T. Ouellette

    • Yale University
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering \& Materials Science, Yale University