Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The near-instantaneous velocity field is of particular importance. PIV therefore has all the
advantages of a flow visualization method, but it can also provide valuable quantitative
information. Once the velocity field is known, data such as vorticity and strain are easily
obtained, and if there are sufficient PIV recordings, even the turbulence intensity can be
estimated.
Interest is growing in aircraft wake studies because of increased airport capacities and the
resultant takeoff and landing frequencies. Research projects on wake vortices using PIV
techniques are driven by aeronautical research organizations and by the aircraft
manufacturers. The subject of wake vortices is important for the efficiency of airports,
since a reduction of wake vortices could lead to the reduction of the required distance
between aircrafts and therefore increase the start and landing frequencies.
Research is also driven by safety considerations following several aircraft mishaps that
were caused by wake vortex effects. For realistic investigation and meaningful results on
aircraft aerodynamics, the use of cryogenic wind tunnels and nonintrusive optical flow
measurement techniques like PIV are of increasing importance.
Figure 1. Experimental arrangement for PIV in a wind tunnel.
Basic principles
The local displacement vector of the images of the tracer particles of the first and second
illumination is determined for each area of the interrogation plane through statistical
methods (Figure 2). In order to handle the amount of data that can be collected with PIV,
sophisticated postprocessing is required. Therefore, the photographic PIV recording is
digitized after development by scanners. The output of the CCD sensor is stored directly in
real time in PC memory.
Figure 2. Velocity vector map from PIV postprocessing.
For a better understanding of the special technical solution in the field of laser illumination,
some general aspects of the technique have to be understood:
Velocity lag: The need to employ tracer particles for the measurement of the flow velocity
requires checking each experiment carefully as to whether the particle will faithfully follow
the motion of the flow. Experience shows that small particles will follow the flow better
even in high-speed air flows.
Illumination: For applications in gas flows, a high-power light source is required so that the
light scattered by the tracer particles will expose the photographic film or the video sensor.
A more powerful light source (e.g., a high-energy laser pulse) will allow the use of smaller
tracer particles and minimize the problem of velocity lag.
Duration of illumination pulse: The duration of the illumination pulse must be sufficiently
short so that the motion of the particles is "frozen" during the pulse exposure to avoid
blurring the images.
Time delay between illumination pulses: Time delay between the illumination pulses has to
be long enough to enable the displacement between the images of the tracer particles to be
determined with sufficient resolution, and short enough to avoid particles with an out-of-
plane velocity component leaving the light sheet between subsequent illuminations.
Developments in PIV over the past two decades have been influenced by the replacement
of analog recording and evaluation techniques by digital techniques. Meanwhile, faster
computer processor speeds and memories have improved the handling of complete digital
PIV recordings by a personal computer. And progressive scan video cameras allow users to
store the images of the tracer particles on separate frames for each illumination with a
resolution of 1040 × 1320 pixels — a quality equivalent to evaluation of 35 mm
photographic films in the past.
In addition to the use of digital recording and evaluation techniques, the development of
reliable high-power laser sources influenced the improvement of PIV and its application in
air flows. The required high-energy light pulse for high-speed air flow PIV (as used in the
investigation of aircraft aerodynamics) was first made possible by the use of semiconductor
lasers. Commercially available Nd:YAG lasers offer sufficient pulse energies from about
100 to 750 mJ. A further advantage of laser sources is their monochromatic light, which
can be bundled into thin light sheets for illuminating and recording the tracer particles
without chromatic aberrations. For PIV, the fundamental wavelength of 1064 nm is
frequency-doubled to a wavelength of 564 nm in visible light.
While the required pulse energy for illumination is easily obtained by Nd:YAG lasers, the
supply of two light pulses with a well-defined and appropriate time delay causes
considerable technical difficulties. To enable the user to adjust the separation time between
the two illuminations corresponding to the application and independent of the pulse
strength, PIV lasers are mostly designed as double oscillator systems. The two lasers are
triggered with a predetermined delay. Their pulsed beams are orthogonally polarized and
are led to the common output aperture by an optical system of mirrors, polarizers, etc.
Figure 3. The InnoLas SpitLight system.
The main problem is an appropriate alignment of the two beams. A maximum colinearity of
the two beams has to be realized. Yet, the beam profile of high-power Nd:YAG lasers tends
to be rather poor. Hot spots and different ring modes are often found. Since a good beam
profile — in the near- and far-field, and a mid-field distance of 2 to 10 m from the laser —
is absolutely essential for PIV, the tuning of each individual laser and the adjustment of the
optical system requires a maximum of specialized know-how, which makes PIV laser
installation very expensive.
To address this problem, InnoLas has developed the YAGMaster double-pulse laser system
with pulse energies from 100 to 450 mJ at a laser wavelength of 532 nm. Our goal was the
generation of a double pulse with a time difference of 1 to 200 µs from a single oscillator.
This is done by refiring the oscillator cell during the pulse emission. This eliminates the
need for the complicated and costly superposition of two separate beams commonly
applied. The beam profile (flat top) ensures uniform illumination and, because of the
single-oscillator method, is completely identical for both beam pulses.
The efficiency of the system has been demonstrated with a pilot application at the
Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), the German Aerospace Center in
Göttingen, Germany. At the DLR, cryogenic investigations of the trailing vortices of large
future transport aircraft have been performed on an aircraft half-model with different wing
tip devices. The model has been installed in the cryogenic wind tunnel of the German-
Dutch wind tunnels (DNW) in Cologne, Germany. PIV measurements were carried out at
airflow velocities of approximately 50 m/s and temperatures of less than –170 °C with
particle sizes less than 1 µm.
In the DLR tests, a single-oscillator Nd:YAG double-pulse laser from InnoLas was used for
illumination. This new design made it possible to generate two light pulses with a defined
time delay from one laser source. The two resulting beams have an excellent spatial
intensity profile, which is identical for both pulses and perfectly overlapping for pulse
separation times between 1 and 200 µs. The output energy was 2 × 120 mJ. This energy
was sufficient to illuminate the chosen recording plane. The time delay between the two
laser pulses was set between 7 and 20 µs. The size of the observation area was
approximately 80 × 110 mm. The light sheet thickness was adjusted to about 1.5 mm. The
sheet was oriented normal to the main flow direction 0.15 m behind the wing tip device. A
CCD camera with a spatial resolution of 1040 × 1320 pixels was used as the recording
device.
With the new single-oscillator double-pulse laser method, the technical requirements for
PIV measurements in high-speed air flows with small tracer particles — high pulse energy,
well-defined and appropriate time delay between the laser pulses and perfect colinearity of
the two illuminating beams — were fully met. With modern digital recording devices and a
powerful PC-based postprocessing and evaluation of the digitized PIV data, valuable flow
field information can be obtained within a short test time.
For even more comfortable use in PIV applications, InnoLas has developed an improved
version of the double-pulse laser systems. The SpitLight Nd:YAG laser system with a
ceramic reflector system of the pumping chamber offers double laser light pulses with a
time delay to be continually chosen between 1 and 1000 µs.
The double-pulse laser method can be used for other applications such as
laser spectroscopy, laser-induced fluorescence (LIF), laser-induced breakdown
spectroscopy (LIBS), dye laser pumping, optical parametric oscillator (OPO) pumping and
others. At present, an InnoLas double-pulse laser system is in use at the SILAS project of
the Frauenhofer Institut Lasertechnik in Germany. The goal of the project is to develop
technological means for the rapid identification of metallic waste materials based on a
combination of fast image processing, laser-based geometry detection and laser-induced
breakdown spectrometry.
Acknowledgement
We especially acknowledge the support of M. Raffel (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und
Raumfahrt, Göttingen).
References
Becker, W., J. Bosbach, T. Loose, M. Raffel, and H. Richard. 2003 "Application of Particle
Image Velocimetry under Cryogenic Conditions," Publication of the DLR, Göttingen.
Keane, R.D., and R.J. Adrian. 1990 "Optimization of Particle Image Velocimeters. Part I:
Double Pulsed Systems," Meas. Sci. Technol. 1, pp 1202-1215.
Raffel, M., C. Willert and J. Kompenhans. 2000 "Particle Image Velocimetry, A Practical
Guide," Springer-Verlag.