Modeling and Numerical Simulation of Material Science

Volume 3, Issue 1 (January 2013)

ISSN Print: 2164-5345   ISSN Online: 2164-5353

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.7  Citations  

Application of Nano Technique in Measuring Supersonic/Hypersonic Flow

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 965KB)  PP. 1-3  
DOI: 10.4236/mnsms.2013.31B001    3,265 Downloads   5,368 Views  

ABSTRACT

Turbulence, universally exist in nature and human activities, is a kind of three-dimensional, irregular, unsteady flow. Ever since 19th century when people started to investigated turbulent flow technically, they have never dropped the po-tent and intuitionistic experimental method. Recently, with the development of aviation and aerospace industry, espe-cially with the increase desire of supersonic and hypersonic flight, the mechanism of high speed and compressible flow has become hot topic of fluid research, resulting in development of measurement method and technique. When encoun-tering compressible high flow, traditional techniques, such as schilieren, shadow and interference, cannot measure fine flow structures. Fortunately, multiple-discipline integration of nano technique, laser technique and imaging technique provides a new design for fluid measurement。Nano-tracer planar laser scattering (NPLS) is a new flow visualization technique, which was developed by the authors’ group in 2005, and it can visualize time correctional flow structure in a cross-section of instantaneous 3D supersonic flow at high spatiotemporal resolution. Many studies have demonstrated that NPLS is a powerful tool to study supersonic turbulence.

 

Share and Cite:

C. Zhi, Y. Shihe, Z. Yangzhu, Z. Qinghu and W. Yu, "Application of Nano Technique in Measuring Supersonic/Hypersonic Flow," Modeling and Numerical Simulation of Material Science, Vol. 3 No. 1B, 2013, pp. 1-3. doi: 10.4236/mnsms.2013.31B001.

Cited by

No relevant information.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.