Hot-wire Anemometry


Book Description

A comprehensive and practical book that examines this very important technique used in fluid flow measurements. As well as the physical experimental set-ups and techniques the book deals with the analysis of the signals gathered from HWA probes.




Fundamentals of Hot Wire Anemometry


Book Description

This 1985 book provides a summary of the theory and practice of the hot wire anemometer, an instrument used to measure the speed of fluid flow. Many techniques and uses of this instrument are discussed in detail. The author considers such topics as probe fouling, probe design, and circuit design, as well as the thermodynamics of heated wires and thin films. He also discusses measurements of turbulence, shear flows, vorticity, temperature, combined temperature and velocity, two-phase flows, and compressible flows for measurements in air, water, mercury, blood, glycerine, oil, luminous gases, and polymer solutions. The book concludes with a section on the pulsed wire anemometer and other wake-sensing anemometers. This book assumes a familiarity with basic fluid mechanics. However, mathematical descriptions occur near the end of each chapter thus allowing those with a limited mathematical background to make use of the practical details at the beginning of each chapter.




Hot-wire Calorimetry


Book Description

A very small calorimeter probe (0.001 by 0.25 cm) for measuring local power density in high-energy ion beams has been studied both theoretically and experimentally. For high sensitivity, the wire is heated by a detection current; the change in wire temperature due to ion impingement results in a voltage output. Both ion and joulean heat inputs are balanced by conduction along the wire to cooled supports. A steady-state calibration and error analysis is supported by experiment. Power-density measurements in 1- to 20-kilovolt cesium and mercury ion beams are presented as detailed spatial profile and contour maps. An analysis for the transient response of the hot-wire calorimeter was also verified by calibration experiments.







Development of an automated calibration system for hotwire anemometers


Book Description

Inhaltsangabe:Introduction: In experimental fluid dynamic measurements hot-wire anemometry is used to record information about flow fields. Furthermore one can obtain the magnitude, the direction and even the time dependant behaviour of the fluid flow, if multiple-wire probes are in operation. The hot-wire measurement technique is based on the convective heat transfer from a heated element to the fluid flow, which is actually proportional to the velocity of the flow. So HWA is an indirect measurement technique. There are miscellaneous sensors which work properly in water or other liquids, air or in gas flows. As an example, Fig. 1.1 shows a cross-wire probe in a fluid flow, which can detect the velocity and its direction in two components, if the main flow direction is in one plane (2D flow). Predominantly HWA is a research tool for turbulent flow studies, especially transient procedures. Turbulence models have to be built to represent the characteristics of the flow in numerical simulations (CFD). Therefore only detailed experimental measurements lead to reliable information about the local velocity of a turbulent flow. This can be provided by HWA on the basis of its very high spatial and temporal resolution. Although the development of HWA started at the beginning of the 19th century and new techniques like PIV or LDA (direct methods) have been established, it is still a common device in all wind tunnel labs. The analogue output signal can be optimized by filters before signal processing. It can also be deployed to arrange a spectrum analysis, due to the high temporal resolution. Moreover, unlike the digital devices the analogue signal is densely packed. The range of application is large and leads from sub- and supersonic flows, the independency of the medium to high-temperature measurements. HWA is also affordable in contrast to LDA and PIV systems. In spite of these advantages the natural contamination of the hot-wire probe increases by and by, since the particles in the fluid flow mature themselves to the probe and finally isolate it. As this effect of disturbance causes measuring errors, the hot-wire probes have to be calibrated at frequent intervals - best before and after every data acquisition series. However, HWA is an intrusive measurement technique, thus disturbing the flow. Another disadvantage is that it is not applicable in separation and backward flow regions. The aim of this thesis is to develop an automated calibration system to [...]




A Hot-wire Stagnation Temperature Probe


Book Description

A temperature probe using a platinum 'hot-wire' which can be used to measure the local stagnation temperature in a hypersonic boundary layer was designed and tested. The temperature dependence of the wire properties is taken into account which greatly extends the probe's operating range. The primary function of the probe is to measure the temperature profiles in the sublayer. The small wire size (0.0001 inches) and suitable probe design make it possible to make measurements to within 0.003 inches of the wall. (Author).







Black & Decker The Complete Guide to Wiring


Book Description

"Covers all of the most common do-it-yourself home wiring skills and projects, including new circuits, installations and repair. New projects in this edition include upgrading a service panel to 209 amps and wiring an outbuilding"--Provided by publisher.







Engineering Turbulence Modelling and Experiments - 2


Book Description

Today understanding turbulence is one of the key issues in tackling flow problems in engineering. Powerful computers and numerical methods are now available for solving flow equations, but the simulation of turbulence effects, which are nearly always important in practice, are still at an early stage of development. Successful simulation of turbulence requires the understanding of the complex physical phenomena involved and suitable models for describing the turbulence momentum, heat and mass transfer. The 89 papers, including 5 invited papers, in this volume present and discuss new developments in the area of turbulence modelling and measurements, with particular emphasis on engineering-related problems. The high standard of the contributions on the developing and testing of turbulent models attests to the world-wide interest this domain is currently attracting from researchers.