Abstract
Hydraulic jumps are oftentimes encountered in natural and human-made environments. The transition from supercritical to subcritical flow involves large energy dissipation rates and substantial air entrainment, preventing the use of monophasic flow measurement instrumentation. This paper presents an experimental study of a stable hydraulic jump with a Froude number of 4.25, utilizing novel intrusive phase-detection probe techniques and image-based velocimetry from a side perspective. Turbulence estimations were obtained for the impinging region and the roller region of the jump including Reynolds stresses, turbulent integral scales and velocity fluctuation spectra. The velocity spectra fulfilled a - 5/3 slope in the inertial subrange, despite the high aeration of the flow. Overall, the collected data is of particular interest for high-fidelity numerical model validation and the study represents an advancement in air-water flow research enabled by the latest experimental developments for multiphase flows.
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