Compressible Flow Measurements Using Nano-scale Thermal Anemometry Probes

ORAL

Abstract

Nano-scale thermal anemometry probes (NSTAP) were used to extract spatially and temporally resolved mass flux measurements in compressible flows, where short time scales and high speeds are ever-present constraints. These miniature hot-wires (wires typically 100 nm thick, 2 μm wide and 60 μm long) were redesigned and mounted in the Trisonic Wind Tunnel Munich (TWM) located at Bundeswehr University and data was collected for a range of Reynolds and Mach numbers (5E6<Re<5E7 m-1 and 0.3<M<2.0). Free-stream measurements were performed and the turbulence intensity was compared to that found using particle image velocimetry (PIV). Additional caution must be taken when calibrating hot-wires in supersonic flows as they are susceptible to total temperature changes as well as mass flux changes. Different calibration techniques were investigated and a linear relationship between the Nusselt number and the Reynolds number fit the NSTAP data best, which has previously been attributed to the free-molecular flow regime. We report recent efforts to validate this observation as well as to compare NSTAP and PIV data in the free-stream of the TWM at various flow conditions.

*AFOSR FA9550-16-1-0170 (program manager: Ivett Leyva) as well as the TRR 40 Collaborative Research Center funded by the DFG.

Presenters

  • Katherine Kokmanian

    • Princeton Univ
    • Princeton University

Authors

  • Katherine Kokmanian

    • Princeton Univ
    • Princeton University
  • Subrahmanyam Duvvuri

    • Princeton Univ
    • Princeton University
  • Sven Scharnowski

    • Universitaet der Bundeswehr Muenchen
  • Matthew Bross

    • Universitaet der Bundeswehr Muenchen
  • Christian J. Kaehler

    • Universitaet der Bundeswehr Muenchen
    • Universität der Bundeswehr München
  • Marcus Hultmark

    • Princeton University
    • Princeton Univ