Abstract

This paper presents an experimental study of the interactions of three fully-submerged, coplanar impinging jets issued from long pipes. The jets were neutrally buoyant and were arranged symmetrically about the axis of a central jet, with two side jets set to intersect with the central jet at two inclination angles (30° and 45°) and three Reynolds numbers (4240, 6400 and 8000). Measurements of the flow fields were performed using particle image velocimetry to examine the flow structures in various planes, i.e., the jet axis plane (X–Y), the jet normal plane (X–Z) and the cross-sectional plane (Y–Z). This flow configuration results in pronounced interactions among the three jets, and hence better mixing than that of a canonical single pipe jet as illustrated by augmented centreline velocity decay, spreading rate and turbulence level. The jets at the inclination angle of 45° impinge and mix more rapidly than those at 30°. For each case, the flow is highly 3-dimensional, and jet development displayed several distinct regions (converging, merging and combining) along the streamwise direction. The expansion of flow in the X–Y plane is similar to the shape of a hyperbola with necking formed immediately downstream of the impinging point, whereas that in the X–Z plane assumes the shape of a parabola with an open rim exhibiting a pronounced velocity deficit in the central part of the combining flow. Self-similarity of streamwise mean velocity is explored in the combining region of the flow on the two planes of symmetry (X–Y and X–Z). Flow development in the combining region is dominated by large-scale vortical structures, including von Karman-like spanwise vortices in the X–Y plane and secondary circulation in the form of two pairs of counter-rotating streamwise vortices in the Y–Z plane.

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