Abstract

Particle image velocimetry (PIV) is increasingly used to investigate unsteady velocity fields instantaneously. For the first time the PIV technique allows the recording of a complete velocity field in a plane of the flow within a few microseconds. The PIV technique thereby provides information about unsteady flow fields which is difficult to obtain with other experimental techniques. The short acquisition times and fast availability of data reduce the operational time, and hence cost, in large scale wind tunnels and test facilities. At DLR a variety of PIV systems for use in industrial wind tunnels has been developed in the past decade. The flexibility of these portable systems is illustrated by presenting several results of recent PIV applications. More recently the original photographic means of PIV image recording has been partially replaced by high resolution electronic imaging which can provide PIV data nearly on-line. Images recorded by either system use the same multiple-pass, cross-correlation analysis software, whose algorithms are briefly described. Several examples of actual applications are given: the flow issuing from a jet nozzle was imaged by a specially developed high-speed video camera at close proximity. A high resolution dual-frame digital camera was applied in the study of helicopter rotor aerodynamics and wake vortex measurements of an airplane model. Further, large image sequences exceeding 100 PIV recordings provided detailed information on the structure of a turbulent boundary layer.

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