Self-Preserving Properties of Unsteady Round Nonbuoyant Turbulent Starting Jets and Puffs in Still Fluids
The self-preserving properties of round nonbuoyant turbulent starting jets, puffs, and interrupted jets were investigated both experimentally and theoretically for flows in still and unstratified environments. The experiments involved dye-containing fresh water sources injected into still fresh wate...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of heat transfer 2002-06, Vol.124 (3), p.460-469 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The self-preserving properties of round nonbuoyant turbulent
starting jets, puffs, and interrupted jets were investigated both experimentally
and theoretically for flows in still and unstratified environments. The
experiments involved dye-containing fresh water sources injected into still
fresh water within a large windowed tank. Time-resolved video images of the
flows were obtained using a CCD camera. Experimental conditions were as follows:
jet exit diameters of 3.2 and 6.4 mm, jet exit Reynolds numbers of 3000–12,000,
jet passage lengths in excess of 50 injector passage diameters, volume of
injected fluid for puffs and interrupted jets up to 191 source diameters, and
streamwise penetration lengths up to 140 source diameters. Near-source behavior
varied significantly with source properties but the flows generally became
turbulent within 5 source diameters from the source and self-preserving behavior
was generally observed at distances greater than 20–30 source diameters from the
source. Within the self-preserving region, both the normalized streamwise
penetration distance and the normalized maximum flow radius varied as functions
of time in agreement with estimates for self-preserving turbulent flows to the
following powers: 1/2 for starting nonbuoyant jets and 1/4 for nonbuoyant puffs
and interrupted jets. Effects of injected fluid quantity for self-preserving
puffs and interrupted jets could be handled by correlating the location of the
virtual origin as a function of the volume of the injected fluid represented by
the number of passage lengths of injected fluid. In particular, the virtual
origin for puffs was independent of injected fluid volume for injected passage
lengths less than 120 but became proportional to the injected fluid volume
thereafter, defining a boundary between puff and interrupted-jet behavior. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1481 1528-8943 |
DOI: | 10.1115/1.1421047 |