4.4 Article

A single-camera, 3D scanning velocimetry system for quantifying active particle aggregations

Journal

EXPERIMENTS IN FLUIDS
Volume 62, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00348-021-03256-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation Grant [1510607]
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
  3. Directorate For Engineering
  4. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys [1510607] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A 3D scanning velocimetry system was successfully applied to quantify the configurations of particles and their surrounding velocity fields. Through a study on brine shrimp, the capability of the system to accurately identify and reconstruct individual swimmers' 3D trajectories, as well as resolve the 3D velocity field around the swimming aggregation, was confirmed.
A three-dimensional (3D) scanning velocimetry system is applied to quantify the 3D configurations of particles and their surrounding volumetric, three-component velocity fields. The approach uses a translating laser sheet to rapidly scan through a volume of interest and sequentially illuminate slices of the flow containing both tracers seeded in the fluid and particles comprising the aggregation of interest. These image slices are captured by a single high-speed camera, encoding information about the third spatial dimension within the image time-series. Where previous implementations of scanning systems have been developed for either volumetric flow quantification or 3D object reconstruction, we evaluate the feasibility of accomplishing these tasks concurrently with a single camera, which can streamline data collection and analysis. The capability of the system was characterized using a study of induced vertical migrations of millimeter-scale brine shrimp (Artemia salina). Identification and reconstruction of individual swimmer bodies and 3D trajectories within the migrating aggregation were achieved up to the maximum number density studied presently, 8 x 10(5) animals per m(3). This number density is comparable to the densities of previous depth-averaged 2D measurements of similar migrations. Corresponding velocity measurements of the flow indicate that the technique is capable of resolving the 3D velocity field in and around the swimming aggregation. At these animal number densities, instances of coherent flow induced by the migrations were observed. The local animal number density field was computed for select instances and correlated to the local vertical velocity. A trend of increased localized downward velocity was observed in each case as the localized animal number densities increased from 0 - 2 x 10(6) animals per m3. The accuracy of these flow measurements was confirmed in separate studies of a free jet at Re-D = 50 and a numerical experiment using a DNS flow field. The former experimentally verified the ability of the technique to measure each velocity component, while the latter quantified the flow reconstruction errors due to the presence of suspended particles.

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