Estimation of large scale motions in a turbulent boundary layer from direct wall shear stress measurements

ORAL

Abstract

Direct measurements of the fluctuating wall shear stress are captured in a zero pressure gradient turbulent boundary layer at Reθ ≈ 5000 with a 1 mm × 0.2 mm floating element capacitive sensing system. The velocity field is captured simultaneously in separate stereo particle image velocimetry (PIV) data planes, and the estimated velocity field is created based on correlations with targeted wall shear stress events. These events are characterized by instantaneous wall shear stress magnitude, local turbulence intensity via VITA-type approaches, and large scale patterns via low pass filtering. The estimated field is compared to the time-resolved hot-wire measurements of single point velocity to ascertain the effects of the frozen field hypothesis at this Reynolds number, using previous measurements of the convection velocity of the wall shear stress. In addition, the comparison between the spatial- and temporal- reconstruction is used to capture incipient attached eddy scaling at this Reynolds number.

*This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant DGE-1315138 as well as Grant CBET-1744146. The authors also wish to acknowledge the support of the Florida Center for Advanced Aero-Propulsion (FCAAP).

Presenters

  • Rommel Jose Pabon

    • University of Florida

Authors

  • Rommel Jose Pabon

    • University of Florida
  • Lawrence Ukeiley

    • University of Florida
  • Mark Sheplak

    • University of Florida