A possible reinterpretation of the Princeton superpipe data
In experiments recently performed at Melbourne, Pitot-tube mean velocity profiles in a boundary layer disagreed with those obtained with hot wires. The standard MacMillan (1956) correction for the probe displacement effect and a correction for turbulence intensity were both required for obtaining ag...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of fluid mechanics 2001-07, Vol.439, p.395-401 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In experiments recently performed at Melbourne, Pitot-tube mean velocity profiles
in a boundary layer disagreed with those obtained with hot wires. The standard
MacMillan (1956) correction for the probe displacement effect and a correction for
turbulence intensity were both required for obtaining agreement between the two
sets of mean velocity data. We were thus motivated to reanalyse the Princeton
superpipe data using the same two corrections. The result is a plausible conclusion
that the superpipe is rough at the higher Reynolds numbers and its data follow the
Colebrook (1939) formula for commercial pipes rather well. It also appears that the
logarithmic law of the wall is valid, with a Kármán constant close to that found
recently by Österlund (1999) from boundary layer measurements with a hot wire. The
smooth regime in the pipe gave almost the same additive constant for the log-law as
Österlund's. A comparison between the superpipe data and the pipe data of Perry,
Henbest & Chong (1997) suggests that the conventional velocity defect law may be
valid down to lower Reynolds numbers than concluded by Zagarola & Smits (1998). |
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ISSN: | 0022-1120 1469-7645 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0022112001004840 |