Howdy!!
Here is a brief tour of our fabulous laboratory. Although it is called LDA Lab at the
moment, we do much more. It is located in Bldg 541, between Engineering II and Chemistry.
The laboratory has two 3-D LDA systems, each powered by a 5W Ar-Ion Laser. The first LDA
system that we acquired deserves special mention because its optical system was entirely
designed and fabricated by Roni Plachta, an ex-graduate student and Martin Vandenbroek,
our know-it-all laboratory engineer. The front optics of this LDA-system has been
designed to minimize the effect of refraction so that it can operate with a probe volume
of 50 cubic microns. It has been extensively used for measurements close to the wall and
free-surface of turbulent channel flows. Currently it is being used by Xinsuang Nan, a
graduate student in our lab, to study the phenomenon of wave-turbulence interaction in a
horizontal channel of size 8m x 0.7m x 0.25m.
The other LDA system takes measurements is a slightly smaller horizontal channel of size
4.5m x 0.32m x 0.1m. This channel was designed by Daniel Kaftori. Danny carried out
extensive experiments on Particle-Turbulence interaction in this channel with some very
interesting visualizations of near-wall turbulence structure. More recently, this channel
has been used to study the characteristics of free-surface turbulence in turbulent channel
flows using flow visualizations (LIF and time-intergrated imaginging of micro-particles
sprinked on the free-surface), and PIV (particle imaging
velocimetry) measurements. These experiments have been
performed by Sanjeev Kumar and Rohit Gupta. Digital images for PIV analysis have been
captured by moving a digital camera (Kodak EktaPro6000 - which can capture images up to
6000 partial frames/sec), mounted on a computer controlled traverse (Daedal 20400
with 4-axis Compumotor indexer - AT6400), close to the speed of the free-surface. A high
resolution PIV algorithm (we call it Hierarchical Particle Image Velocimetry - HDPIV) has
been developed to get quantitative information from the digital images.
Rohit has recently constructed another channel which will facilitate experiments related
to the interaction of structures produced near the bottom of a
channel with the free-surface at high Reynolds
numbers (~ 50,000). This channel, made of 2cm thick glass plate, is 3.5m long and 2m
wide. Experiments are to be conducted at water depths of 0.5cm or less at Reynolds
numbers higher than 50,000. At such high Re turbulent spots are seen at the free-surface,
which are basically near-wall structures interacting with the free-surface. By
flow-visualizations, quantitative measurements of the velocity field in these near-wall
generated structures, and simultaneous measurements of the free-surface deformation, the
experiment aims at providing detailed information on
interactions between a free-surface
and turbulence. Rohit is also working on another experiment to study the effect of
particles on heat transfer at a solid-liquid interface. This experimental facility is
also near completion.