A cryogenic-helium pipe flow facility with unique double-line molecular tagging velocimetry capability
Cryogenic helium-4 has extremely small kinetic viscosity, which makes it a promising material for high Reynolds (\(Re\)) number turbulence research in compact laboratory apparatuses. In its superfluid phase (He II), helium has an extraordinary heat transfer capability and has been utilized in variou...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2020-03 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cryogenic helium-4 has extremely small kinetic viscosity, which makes it a promising material for high Reynolds (\(Re\)) number turbulence research in compact laboratory apparatuses. In its superfluid phase (He II), helium has an extraordinary heat transfer capability and has been utilized in various scientific and engineering applications. In order to unlock the full potential of helium in turbulence research and to improve our understanding of the heat transfer mechanism in He II, a flow facility that allows quantitative study of helium heat-and-mass transfer processes is needed. Here we report our work in assembling and testing a unique helium pipe flow facility that incorporates a novel double-line molecular tracking velocimetry (DL-MTV) system. This flow facility allows us to generate turbulent pipe flows with \(Re\) above \(10^7\), and it can also be adapted to produce heat-induced counterflow in He II. The DL-MTV system, which is based on the generation and tracking of two parallel thin He\(^*_2\) molecular tracer lines with an adjustable separation distance, allows us to measure not only the velocity profile but also both the transverse and longitudinal spatial velocity structure functions. We have also installed a deferential pressure sensor to the flow pipe for pressure drop measurement. The testing results of the flow facility and the measurement devices are presented. We discuss how this facility will allow us to solve some outstanding problems in the helium heat-and-mass transfer topic area. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2003.07420 |