Effect of temperature on jet velocity spectra
13th AIAA/CEAS aeroacoustics conference (28th AIAA aeroacoustics conference), 2007•arc.aiaa.org
Statistical jet noise prediction codes that accurately predict spectral directivity for both cold
and hot jets are highly sought both in industry and academia. Their formulation, whether
based upon manipulations of the Navier-Stokes equations or upon heuristic arguments,
require substantial experimental observation of jet turbulence statistics. Unfortunately, the
statistics of most interest involve the space-time correlation of flow quantities, especially
velocity. Until the last 10 years, all turbulence statistics were made with single-point probes …
and hot jets are highly sought both in industry and academia. Their formulation, whether
based upon manipulations of the Navier-Stokes equations or upon heuristic arguments,
require substantial experimental observation of jet turbulence statistics. Unfortunately, the
statistics of most interest involve the space-time correlation of flow quantities, especially
velocity. Until the last 10 years, all turbulence statistics were made with single-point probes …
Statistical jet noise prediction codes that accurately predict spectral directivity for both cold and hot jets are highly sought both in industry and academia. Their formulation, whether based upon manipulations of the Navier-Stokes equations or upon heuristic arguments, require substantial experimental observation of jet turbulence statistics. Unfortunately, the statistics of most interest involve the space-time correlation of flow quantities, especially velocity. Until the last 10 years, all turbulence statistics were made with single-point probes, such as hotwires or laser Doppler anemometry. Particle image velocimetry (PIV) brought many new insights with its ability to measure velocity fields over large regions of jets simultaneously; however, it could not measure velocity at rates higher than a few fields per second, making it unsuitable for obtaining temporal spectra and correlations. The development of time-resolved PIV, herein called TR-PIV, has removed this limitation, enabling measurement of velocity fields at high resolution in both space and time. In this paper, ground-breaking results from the application of TR-PIV to single-flow hot jets are used to explore the impact of heat on turbulent statistics of interest to jet noise models. First, a brief summary of validation studies is reported, undertaken to show that the new technique produces the same trusted results as hotwire at cold, low-speed jets. Second, velocity spectra from cold and hot jets are compared to see the effect of heat on the spectra. It is seen that heated jets possess 10% more turbulence intensity compared to the unheated jets with the same velocity. The spectral shapes, when normalized using Strouhal scaling, are insensitive to temperature if the stream-wise location is normalized relative to the potential core length. Similarly, second order velocity correlations, of interest in modeling of jet noise sources, are also insensitive to temperature as well.
AIAA Aerospace Research Center
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