2 research outputs found

    Novel Particle Image Velocimetry System Based on Three-Color Pulsed Lamps and Image Processing

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    A novel particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurement system based on flashed lamps as light sources and digital reconstruction of particle positions by image processing is presented. Three different colors are used in order to distinguish, on a same photograph, the corresponding positions of each moving particle at three different instants of time. This solution can give significant advantages in several aerodynamic and hydrodynamic situations. In particular, it allows high flexibility for velocity measurements and independent settings of different acquisition parameters, like pulse powers and timing. Furthermore, the developed PIV measurement system is fully transportable, eye-safe, practical, and economical. The first hydrodynamics measurements achieved by using the proposed velocimetry measurement system are reported

    Vortex shedding from elongated bluff bodies

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    As the spans of suspension bridges increase, the structures become inherently flexible. The flexibility of these structures, combined with the wind and particular aerodynamics, can lead to significant motions. From the collapse due to flutter of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge to the case of vortex-induced vibrations (VIV) of the Storebælt Bridge, it is evident that a better understanding of the aerodynamics of these geometries is necessary. The work herein is motivated by these two problems and is presented in two parts. In the first part, the focus is on the physical mechanisms of vortex shedding. It is shown that the wake formation for elongated bluff bodies is distinct from shorter bluff bodies due to the leading edge separating-reattaching flow. Pressure data are then used to propose a mechanism of competition between the flow at the leading and trailing edges rather than synchronization which occurs at low Reynolds numbers. Within the context of this framework, the wakes are orthogonally decomposed and it was discovered that new modes appear not previously observed for shorter bluff bodies. In Part II, a time-resolved Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) system is developed. This system is used to capture both the high and low frequency dynamics of flutter due its uniquely long recording length. It is shown that, contrary to conventional understanding, the vortex shedding does not significantly change during flutter. Thus, the fact that these bodies shed vortices is only a secondary effect in relation to the flutter instability. There is a distinct contrast between flutter and VIV: the latter is known to be governed by the vortex shedding wake and it has been shown herein that the former is not. Regarding the problem of VIV, it is shown that the wakes of these bodies are formed due to interaction with the leading edge separating-reattaching flow. As the leading edge separation angle grows, it is shown to disturb the trailing edge vortex shedding altering many of the key parameters including fluctuating lift force and shedding frequency
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