Print Email Facebook Twitter Dense velocity reconstruction from tomographic PTV with material derivatives Title Dense velocity reconstruction from tomographic PTV with material derivatives Author Schneiders, J.F.G. (TU Delft Aerodynamics) Scarano, F. (TU Delft Flow Physics and Technology) Department Flow Physics and Technology Date 2016 Abstract A method is proposed to reconstruct the instantaneous velocity field from time-resolved volumetric particle tracking velocimetry (PTV, e.g., 3D-PTV, tomographic PTV and Shake-the-Box), employing both the instantaneous velocity and the velocity material derivative of the sparse tracer particles. The constraint to the measured temporal derivative of the PTV particle tracks improves the consistency of the reconstructed velocity field. The method is christened as pouring time into space, as it leverages temporal information to increase the spatial resolution of volumetric PTV measurements. This approach becomes relevant in cases where the spatial resolution is limited by the seeding concentration. The method solves an optimization problem to find the vorticity and velocity fields that minimize a cost function, which includes next to instantaneous velocity, also the velocity material derivative. The velocity and its material derivative are related through the vorticity transport equation, and the cost function is minimized using the limited-memory Broyden–Fletcher–Goldfarb–Shanno (L-BFGS) algorithm. The procedure is assessed numerically with a simulated PTV experiment in a turbulent boundary layer from a direct numerical simulation (DNS). The experimental validation considers a tomographic particle image velocimetry (PIV) experiment in a similar turbulent boundary layer and the additional case of a jet flow. The proposed technique (‘vortex-in-cell plus’, VIC+) is compared to tomographic PIV analysis (3D iterative cross-correlation), PTV interpolation methods (linear and adaptive Gaussian windowing) and to vortex-in-cell (VIC) interpolation without the material derivative. A visible increase in resolved details in the turbulent structures is obtained with the VIC+ approach, both in numerical simulations and experiments. This results in a more accurate determination of the turbulent stresses distribution in turbulent boundary layer investigations. Data from a jet experiment, where the vortex topology is retrieved with a small number of tracers indicate the potential utilization of VIC+ in low-concentration experiments as for instance occurring in large-scale volumetric PTV measurements. To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:f6c1d567-201b-46f9-bacf-275b1abf1055 DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00348-016-2225-6 ISSN 0723-4864 Source Experiments in Fluids: experimental methods and their applications to fluid flow, 57 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2016 J.F.G. Schneiders, F. Scarano Files PDF art_3A10.1007_2Fs00348_01 ... 2225_6.pdf 7.61 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:f6c1d567-201b-46f9-bacf-275b1abf1055/datastream/OBJ/view