Browsing by Subject "Mixing"
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Item Development of scalar and velocity imaging diagnostics for supersonic hypermixing strut injector flowfields(2014-12) Burns, Ross Andrew; Clemens, Noel T.A new diagnostic technique for studying the turbulent mixing characteristics of supersonic mixing flowfields is developed and implemented in two Mach 3 mixing flowfields. The diagnostic utilizes simultaneous particle image velocimetry and quantitative planar laser-induced fluorescence of krypton gas to study the interaction between turbulent scalar and velocity fields. The fluorescence properties of krypton gas are determined; measurements of the pressure and temperature dependence of the collisional quenching rates and cross-sections are made for various mixtures with krypton. The gases tested in this fashion include helium, nitrogen, air, oxygen, and ethylene. Additional measurements are performed to measure the relative two-photon absorption cross-section for krypton gas. The non-dimensional quenching rates are found to follow a power-law dependence for temperature, while the pressure dependence of the total quenching rate is found to be linear. Two injection flowfields are studied for their general topology and kinematic characteristcs. The first injector model is a basic injector meant to serve as a baseline case; there are no hypermixing elements present in this model. The second model is an asymmetric, unswept hypermixing injector featuring 15 degree expansive ramps flanking a central block. These studies utilize particle image velocimetry in planar and stereoscopic configurations in various planes. Results for the mean flowfield show distinct differences between the two flowfields; the planar injector flowfield is shown to be highly two-dimensional and exhibits minimal coherent unsteady behavior. The hypermixing injector flowfield exhibits a highly three-dimensional wake, with a pair of stream-wise vortices driving both mean deviations in the flowfield and considerable vortical coupling in the span-wise direction. Simultaneous krypton PLIF and PIV are employed in the two mixing flowfields. An assay of the dependence of the krypton mole fraction calculations on the fluorescence signal is performed. The overall sensitivity and the resulting dynamic range of the calibration is dictated largely by the reference mole fraction. Additionally, several different theoretical models of the temperature dependence of the fluorescence signal are studied to assess their validity and influence over the PLIF calibration procedure. Finally, the technique is employed in the two mixing flowfields, and a brief analysis of the mean and unsteady behavior of the two is conducted.Item Droplet generation and mixing in confined gaseous microflows(2012-12) Carroll, Brian Christopher; Hidrovo, Carlos H.; Bonnecaze, Roger; da Silva, Alexandre; Moser, Robert; Shi, LiFast mixing remains a major challenge in droplet-based microfluidics. The low Reynolds number operating regime typical of most microfluidic devices signify laminar and orderly flows that are devoid of any inertial characteristics. To increase mixing rates in droplet-based devices, a novel technique is presented that uses a high Reynolds number gaseous phase for droplet generation and transport and promotes mixing through binary droplet collisions at velocities near 1m/s. Control of multiple gas and liquid streams is provided by a newly constructed microfluidic test bed that affords the stringent flow stability required for generating liquid droplets in gaseous flows. The result is droplet production with size dispersion and generation frequencies not previously achievable. Limitations of existing mixing diagnostic methods have led to the development of a new measurement technique for measuring droplet collision mixing in confined microchannels. The technique employs single fluorophore laser-induced fluorescence, custom image processing, and meaningful statistical analysis for monitoring and quantifying mixing in high-speed droplet collisions. Mixing information is revealed through three governing statistics that that separate the roles of convective rearrangement and molecular diffusion during the mixing process. The end result is a viewing window into the rich dynamics of droplet collisions with spatial and temporal resolutions of 1μm and 25μs, respectively. Experimental results obtained across a decade vi of Reynolds and Peclet numbers reveal a direct link between droplet mixing time and the collision convective timescale. Increasing the collision velocity or reducing the collision length scale is the most direct method for increasing droplet mixing rates. These characteristics are complemented by detaching droplets under inertial conditions, where increasing the Reynolds number of the continuous gaseous phase generates and transports smaller droplets at faster rates. This work provides valuable insight into the emerging field of two-phase gas-liquid microfluidics and opens the door to fundamental research possibilities not offered by traditional oil-based architectures.Item The efficiency of turbulent mixing in stratified fluids(2010-08) Ebert, Guenther Wolfgang; Swinney, H. L., 1939-; Fink, ManfredMixing is a common feature of stratified fluids. In stratified fluids the density varies with the height. This is true for the most fluids in geophysical environments, like lakes, the atmosphere or the ocean. Turbulent mixing plays a crucial role for the overall energy budget of the earth and has therefore an huge impact on the global climate. By introducing the mixing efficiency, it is possible to quantify mixing. It is defined as the ratio of gain of potential energy to the injection of mechanical energy. In the ocean energy provided by tidal forces leads to turbulence and thus highly dense water is lifted up from the deep sea to the surface. For this process, a mixing efficiency of 0.2 is estimated. Until now it is not completely understood how this high value can be achieved. Thus we measured the mixing efficiency by using a Couette-Taylor system, which can produce steady-state homogeneous turbulence. This is similar to what we find in the ocean. The Couette-Taylor system consists of two concentric cylinders that can be rotated independently. In between a stratified fluid is filled using salt as a stratifying agent. In the laboratory experiment, we obtained mixing efficiencies in the order of 0.001 as a result. Moreover we found that the mixing efficiency decreases with decreasing stratification like previous laboratory experiments have shown. As this value is two orders of magnitude smaller than what we find in the ocean, further studies will be necessary.Item Modeling a gravity current in a shallow fluid system(2011-12) Kulis, Paula Sharon; Hodges, Ben R.; Maidment, David R.; Katz, Lynn E.; Reible, Danny D.; Raman, VenkatramanCorpus Christi Bay in Texas is a wind driven system, and under most conditions winds over the bay mix the water column vertically. However, seasonal, episodic, bottom-water hypoxia has been observed in the bay in conjunction with vertical salinity stratification. This stratification may be caused by dense gravity currents entering the bay. Understanding and modeling the mechanisms that result in stratification in Corpus Christi Bay may help predict hypoxia, and for this reason that is the focus of this dissertation. An evaluation of existing gravity current modeling techniques shows that most currently available models are designed to capture either phenomena local to a gravity current, such as gravity current entrainment and spreading, or larger scale phenomena such as wind mixing and large-scale circulation, but not both. Because gravity current mixing in Corpus Christi Bay is enhanced by wind-induced turbulence, both local gravity current physics and wind mixing effects are critical elements governing gravity current propagation in Corpus Christi Bay. As existing models do not represent gravity current entrainment and wind mixing together, this dissertation develops a coupled model system that accounts explicitly for turbulent wind mixing of a bottom-boundary layer, in addition to representing other local features of dense gravity current propagation such as entrainment and spreading. The coupled model system consists of a 2D depth-averaged hydrodynamic model that calculates gravity current mixing and spreading, coupled with a 3D hydrodynamic model whose domain includes a lighter ambient fluid surrounding the gravity current. The coupled models have flexible boundary conditions that allow fluid exchange to represent mixing from both gravity current entrainment and wind mixing. The coupled model system’s development, verification and application in Corpus Christi Bay advances understanding of gravity current mechanisms, and contributes to our scientific understanding of hypoxia in Corpus Christi Bay. This modeling technique has the flexibility to be applied to other density-stratified systems that are shallow and potentially wind-driven, such as shallow desalination brine disposal sites.Item On the dynamics of Rayleigh-Taylor mixing(Texas A&M University, 2004-09-30) Ramaprabhu, Praveen KumarThe self-similar evolution of a turbulent Rayleigh-Taylor (R-T) mix is investigated through experiments and numerical simulations. The experiments consisted of velocity and density measurements using thermocouples and Particle Image Velocimetry techniques. A novel experimental technique, termed PIV-S, to simultaneously measure both velocity and density fields was developed. These measurements provided data for turbulent correlations, power spectra, and energy balance analyses. The self-similarity of the flow is demonstrated through velocity profiles that collapse when normalized by an appropriate similarity variable and power spectra that evolve in a shape-preserving form. In the self-similar regime, vertical r.m.s. velocities dominate over the horizontal r.m.s. velocities with a ratio of 2:1. This anisotropy, also observed in the velocity spectra, extends to the Taylor scales. Buoyancy forcing does not alter the structure of the density spectra, which are seen to have an inertial range with a -5/3 slope. A scaling analysis was performed to explain this behavior. Centerline velocity fluctuations drive the growth of the flow, and can hence be used to deduce the growth constant. The question of universality of this flow was addressed through 3D numerical simulations with carefully designed initial conditions. With long wavelengths present in the initial conditions, the growth constant was found to depend logarithmically on the initial amplitudes. In the opposite limit, where long wavelengths are generated purely by the nonlinear interaction of shorter wavelengths, the growth constant assumed a universal lower bound value ofItem On the Effect of Initial Conditions on Rayleigh-Taylor Mixing(2014-12-16) Kuchibhatla, Sarat ChandraAn experimental investigation of the effects of Initial Conditions (ICs) on Rayleigh-Taylor Instability (RTI) is performed using theWater Channel facility at Texas A&M University. Hot and cold water (with a temperature difference of ~ 5-8 ?C) selected as working fluids are unstably stratified initially. The resulting Atwood number for this instability is of the order of 10^-3. In this dissertation, effect of the composition of the initial perturbations generated by a flapper mechanism is studied. Using the servo controlled flapper system, initial wavelengths are varied between 2-8 cm and phase angles within 0-180?, and the dependence of ensemble averaged mixing width in the linear and nonlinear stages of growth on low Atwood number Rayleigh-Taylor mixing is studied. The Interaction of multiple (up to 11) modes of the IC is studied by varying the wavelengths and phase angles that are generated at the interface of these fluids. High resolution Planar Laser Induced Fluorescence (PLIF) images of the flow field indicate that changing the phase angle results in the leaning phenomenon, i.e. the leaning of bubbles and spikes with respect to gravitational acceleration, and relative to each other. Experimental measurement of total mixing width, quality of molecular mixing and scalar dissipation rate are performed using ensemble averaging technique. The results indicate that nonlinear mode coupling of the initial modes affects the rate of mixing as well as the transition to turbulence. Molecular mixing measurements indicate that the molecular mixing rate depends upon the ICs. Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) data indicates that late-time velocity profiles of the mixing layer depend upon ICs. While the density power spectra indicate independence of ICs in the inertial range, the turbulent velocity statistics indicate that increasing the number of modes of the IC quickens the transition to turbulence. It also results in greater mixing, which reduces the density gradients as the flow evolves with time. Thus, the memory of the ICs is lost sooner with increasing number of initial modes.Item Turbulent Flow Analysis and Coherent Structure Identification in Experimental Models with Complex Geometries(2012-02-14) Amini, NoushinTurbulent flows and coherent structures emerging within turbulent flow fields have been extensively studied for the past few decades and a wide variety of experimental and numerical techniques have been developed for measurement and analysis of turbulent flows. The complex nature of turbulence requires methods that can accurately estimate its highly chaotic spatial and temporal behavior. Some of the classical cases of turbulent flows with simpler geometries have been well characterized by means of the existing experimental techniques and numerical models. Nevertheless, since most turbulent fields are of complex geometries; there is an increasing interest in the study of turbulent flows through models with more complicated geometries. In this dissertation, characteristics of turbulent flows through two different facilities with complex geometries are studied applying two different experimental methods. The first study involves the investigation of turbulent impinging jets through a staggered array of rods with or without crossflow. Such flows are crucial in various engineering disciplines. This experiment aimed at modeling the coolant flow behavior and mixing phenomena within the lower plenum of a Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR). Dynamic Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) and Matched Index of Refraction (MIR) techniques were applied to acquire the turbulent velocity fields within the model. Some key flow features that may significantly enhance the flow mixing within the test section or actively affect some of the structural components were identified in the velocity fields. The evolution of coherent structures within the flow field is further investigated using a Snapshot Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) technique. Furthermore, a comparative POD method is proposed and successfully implemented for identification of the smaller but highly influential coherent structures which may not be captured in the full-field POD analysis. The second experimental study portrays the coolant flow through the core of an annular pebble bed VHTR. The complex geometry of the core and the highly turbulent nature of the coolant flow passing through the gaps of fuel pebbles make this case quite challenging. In this experiment, a high frequency Hot Wire Anemometry (HWA) system is applied for velocity measurements and investigation of the bypass flow phenomena within the near wall gaps of the core. The velocity profiles within the gaps verify the presence of an area of increased velocity close to the outer reflector wall; however, the characteristics of the coolant flow profile is highly dependent on the gap geometry and to a less extent on the Reynolds number of the flow. The time histories of the velocity are further analyzed using a Power Spectra Density (PSD) technique to acquire information about the energy content and energy transfer between eddies of different sizes at each point within the gaps.Item Ultra-precise manipulation and assembly of nanoparticles using three fundamental optical forces(2012-12) Demergis, Vassili; Florin, Ernst-Ludwig; Shubeita, George T; Fink, Manfred; Makarov, Dmitrii E; Korgel, Brian AThe invention of the laser in 1960 opened the door for a myriad of studies on the interactions between light and matter. Eventually it was shown that highly focused laser beams could be used to con fine and manipulate matter in a controlled way, and these instruments were known as optical traps. However, challenges remain as there is a delicate balance between object size, precision of control, laser power, and temperature that must be satisfied. In Part I of this dissertation, I describe the development of two optical trapping instruments which substantially extend the allowed parameter ranges. Both instruments utilize a standing wave optical field to generate strong optical gradient forces while minimizing the optical scattering forces, thus dramatically improving trapping efficiency. One instrument uses a cylinder lens to extend the trapping region into a line focus, rather than a point focus, thereby confining objects to 1D motion. By translation of the cylinder lens, lateral scattering forces can be generated to transport objects along the 1D trapping volume, and these scattering forces can be controlled independently of the optical gradient forces. The second instrument uses a collimated beam to generate wide, planar trapping regions which can con fine nanoparticles to 2D motion. In Part II, I use these instruments to provide the first quantitative measurements of the optical binding interaction between nanoparticles. I show that the optical binding force can be over 20 times stronger than the optical gradient force generated in typical optical traps, and I map out the 2D optical binding energy landscape between a pair of gold nanoparticles. I show how this ultra-strong optical binding leads to the self-assembly of multiple nanoparticles into larger contactless clusters of well de ned geometry. I nally show that these clusters have a geometry dependent coupling to the external optical field.Item Vortex street simulation of a two dimensional mixing layer(Texas Tech University, 1987-05) Damle, Moreshwar VNot available