Phase Doppler anemometry (PDA) is a well-established technique to study two-phase flows
and its principles are also used in laser Doppler anemometry (LDA) for measurements of fluid
velocity. Raw measurements of individual particle data require post-processing to obtain
useful and consistent information (moments of velocity, particle concentration and flux,
velocity autocorrelation, etc). This is called in this paper the reconstruction of statistical
information. In the 1970s, several basic algorithms to perform the statistical reconstruction
were developed for LDA measurements (such as the transit time method, the inverse velocity
method, etc). With the advent of PDA, the scientific community developed reconstruction
algorithms to obtain mean variables of the dispersed phase. All these basic algorithms were
expounded as unconnected methods, following independent threads not integrated into a
general framework. Assuming that the PDA works under ideal conditions (all particles that
cross the probe volume are validated), this paper provides a general formulation and fully
systematizes a large set of previous statistical reconstruction methods. In this paper, the
statistical reconstruction of both the dispersed and the continuous phase is unified: the
continuous phase post-processing emerges as the same reconstruction method of the dispersed
phase. The general framework proposed offers many advantages. First, some previous
calculation methods of particle concentration turn out to be particular cases of this general
formulation. Second, it provides an easy way to deduce unbiased estimators of any statistical
parameter of the flow. Third, a wide set of new post-processing methods are proposed to be
tested by any member of the scientific community. In the fourth place, the generalized integral
method to compute the particle concentration also gives information about the probe volume
geometry and two new auto-calibration algorithms are proposed: the integral calibration
method and the cross-section integral calibration method. Finally, a physical interpretation of
the statistical reconstruction process is provided: it is a spatio-temporal averaging of the
detected particle data, and some of the algorithms used are related to the Eulerian–Eulerian
mathematical description of multiphase flowsPeer reviewe
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