15th European Turbulence Conference 2015
August 25-28th, 2015, Delft, The Netherlands
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MEASURING THE ORIENTATION AND ROTATION RATE OF 3D PRINTED PARTICLES IN TURBULENCE


Go-down etc15 Tracking Number 463

Presentation:
Session: Lagrangian aspects of turbulence 2
Room: Room H
Session start: 10:30 Thu 27 Aug 2015

Stefan Kramel   skramel@wesleyan.edu
Affifliation: Wesleyan University

Guy Geyer Marcus   guygmarcus@jhu.edu
Affifliation: Wesleyan University

Shima Parsa   sparsa@seas.harvard.edu
Affifliation: Wesleyan University

Brendan Cole   bcole@wesleyan.edu
Affifliation: Wesleyan University

Rui Ni   ruiniphi@gmail.com
Affifliation: Wesleyan University

Greg Voth   gvoth@wesleyan.edu
Affifliation: Wesleyan University


Topics: - Lagrangian aspects of turbulence

Abstract:

The orientation distribution and rotations of anisotropic particles in turbulent flows play a key role in many applications ranging from icy clouds to papermaking and drag reduction in pipe flow. However, experimental access to time-resolved orientations of anisotropic particles has not been easy to achieve. The use of 3D printing opens up the possibility to fabricate a wide range of particle shapes with smallest dimension down to 300 μm. So far, we have printed rods, crosses, jacks, triads, tetrads and helical particle shapes. We extract particle orientations from stereoscopic video images using a method of least squares optimization in Euler angle space. We find that in turbulence, the orientation and rotation-rate of many particles can be understood using a simple picture of alignment of both the vorticity and a long axis of the particle with the Lagrangian stretching direction of the flow.