4.6 Article

Three-dimensional density measurements of a heated jet using laser-speckle tomographic background-oriented schlieren

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL THERMAL AND FLUID SCIENCE
Volume 142, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.expthermflusci.2022.110819

Keywords

Tomography; Background-oriented schlieren; Turbulent density measurement; Laser speckle; Heated jet

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Tomographic background-oriented schlieren (TBOS) is a promising optical technique for measuring the 3D density field in turbulent flows. It captures path-integrated information on refractive index gradients by observing apparent displacements of textured background patterns. By reconstructing the three-dimensional refractive index gradients, the instantaneous three-dimensional density field can be obtained. Most TBOS measurements so far have been limited by temporal and/or defocus blurring, but our 15-camera set-up using a pulsed laser and laser-speckle background pattern achieves low blurring and high resolution measurements.
Tomographic background-oriented schlieren (TBOS) is a promising optical technique for 3D density field measurement in turbulent flows. Path-integrated information on refractive index gradients is captured by cameras looking through the flow at textured background patterns in the form of apparent displacements of the patterns. A tomographic reconstruction of the three-dimensional refractive index gradients is performed, from which the instantaneous three-dimensional density field is obtained. Most TBOS measurements to date have been limited by large temporal blurring and/or large defocus blurring. Our 15-camera experimental set-up uses a pulsed laser for both illumination and creation of a laser-speckle background pattern. The high-power laser ensures adequate exposures in nanoseconds, so temporal integration is minimised in each measurement. The beam is spread to illuminate a surface that is observed by fifteen cameras that are evenly spaced circumferentially around the flow. Laser speckle patterns are observed by the cameras due to the diffuse reflection and interference of coherent light from roughness on the surface. We develop a methodology for selecting the optimal focal length, focus distance, and lens aperture by considering the compromise between displacement sensitivity, defocus blurring and speckle size. Low temporal-and spatial-blurring 3D temperature field measurements with excellent resolution of turbulent flow features are obtained and good agreement with thermocouple. Classical behaviours of the potential core instability such as vortex rollup and radial ejections are identified. The behaviour of the potential core is examined further, which reveals that the potential core undergoes considerable deformation and fragmentation during the transition to turbulence.

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