Abstract

Many experimenters have used oscillating grids to produce turbulence for various laboratory purposes, especially in studies of mixing, but there have been few direct measurements of the properties of the turbulence itself. In the present paper we report experiments which attempt to relate the turbulent velocity and length scales to the external parameters, the frequency and amplitude, for three forms of grid oscillated in a tank of water. Turbulent velocities have been measured in the absence of a mean flow by using a hot film moved through the fluid to provide its own mean velocity. The output is stored and analysed in a small computer, which rapidly evaluates velocity and length scale statistics from an ensemble of records. The spatial variation of these quantities with distance from the stirrer is of special interest. It agrees with results suggested by an inertial-decay theory, and with previous measurements made by Bouvard & Dumas (1967) using a different form of stirrer. A particular purpose of the work has been to ‘calibrate’ the entrainment experiments of Turner (1968), by providing absolute scales of velocity and length in the fluid near a mixing interface, for the same grid as was used in the earlier experiments. Evidence is presented which suggests that other forms of grid may not be calibrated simply by extrapolating these results.

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