Title: Hot-Wire Anemometry
1Hot-Wire Anemometry
- Purpose
- to measure mean and fluctuating velocities in
fluid flows
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2Principles of operation
- Consider a thin wire mounted to supports and
exposed to a velocity U. - When a current is passed through wire, heat is
generated (I2Rw). In equilibrium, this must be
balanced by heat loss (primarily convective) to
the surroundings.
- If velocity changes, convective heat transfer
coefficient will change, wire temperature will
change and eventually reach a new equilibrium.
3Governing equation I
- Governing Equation
-
- E thermal energy stored in wire
- E CwTs
- Cw heat capacity of wire
- W power generated by Joule heating
- W I2 Rw
- recall Rw Rw(Tw)
- H heat transferred to surroundings
4Governing equation II
- Heat transferred to surroundings
- ( convection to fluid
- conduction to supports
- radiation to surroundings)
- Convection Qc Nu A (Tw -Ta)
- Nu h d/kf f (Re, Pr, M, Gr,a ),
- Re r U/m
- Conduction f(Tw , lw , kw, Tsupports)
- Radiation f(Tw4 - Tf4)
5Simplified static analysis I
- For equilibrium conditions the heat storage is
zero -
- and the Joule heating W equals the convective
heat transfer H - Assumptions
- Radiation losses small
- Conduction to wire supports small
- Tw uniform over length of sensor
- Velocity impinges normally on wire, and is
uniform over its entire length, and also small
compared to sonic speed. - Fluid temperature and density constant
6Simplified static analysis II
Static heat transfer W H I2Rw
hA(Tw -Ta) I2Rw Nukf/dA(Tw
-Ta) h film coefficient of heat
transfer A heat transfer area d wire
diameter kf heat conductivity of
fluid Nu dimensionless heat transfer
coefficient Forced convection regime, i.e. Re
gtGr1/3 (0.02 in air) and Relt140 Nu A1 B1
Ren A2 B2 Un I2Rw2 E2 (Tw -Ta)(A B
Un) Kings law The voltage drop is used as a
measure of velocity.
7Hot-wire static transfer function
- Velocity sensitivity (Kings law coeff. A 1.51,
B 0.811, n 0.43) -
Output voltage as fct. of velocity
Voltage derivative as fct. of velocity
8Directional response I
Probe coordinate system
- Velocity vector U is decomposed into normal Ux,
tangential Uy and binormal Uz components.
9Directional response II
- Finite wire (l/d200) response includes yaw and
pitch sensitivity - U2eff(a) U2(cos2a k2sin2a) q 0
- U2eff(q ) U2(cos2q h2sin2q ) a 0
- where
- k , h yaw and pitch factors
- a , q angle between wire normal/wire-prong
plane, respectively, and velocity
vector - General response in 3D flows
- U2eff Ux2 k2Uy2 h2Uz2
- Ueff is the effective cooling velocity sensed by
the wire and deducted from the calibration
expression, while U is the velocity component
normal to the wire
10Directional response III
- Typical directional response for hot-wire probe
(From DISA 1971)
11Directional response IV
- Yaw and pitch factors k1 and k2 (or k and h)
depend on velocity and flow angle
(From Joergensen 1971)
12Probe types I
- Miniature Wire Probes
- Platinum-plated tungsten,
- 5 mm diameter, 1.2 mm length
- Gold-Plated Probes
- 3 mm total wire length,
- 1.25 mm active sensor
- copper ends, gold-plated
- Advantages
- - accurately defined sensing length
- - reduced heat dissipation by the prongs
- - more uniform temperature distribution
- along wire
- - less probe interference to the flow field
13Probe types II
- For optimal frequency response, the probe should
have as small a thermal inertia as possible. - Important considerations
- Wire length should be as short as possible
(spatial resolution want probe length ltlt eddy
size) - Aspect ratio (l/d) should be high (to minimise
effects of end losses) - Wire should resist oxidation until high
temperatures (want to operate wire at high T to
get good sensitivity, high signal to noise
ratio) - Temperature coefficient of resistance should be
high (for high sensitivity, signal to noise
ratio and frequency response) - Wires of less than 5 µm diameter cannot be
drawn with reliable diameters
14Probe types III
- Film Probes
- Thin metal film (nickel) deposited on quartz
- body. Thin quartz layer protects metal film
- against corrosion, wear, physical damage,
- electrical action
- Fiber-Film Probes
- Hybrid - film deposited on a thin
- wire-like quartz rod (fiber) split fiber-film
- probes.
15Probe types IV
- X-probes for 2D flows
- 2 sensors perpendicular to each other. Measures
within 45o. - Split-fiber probes for 2D flows
- 2 film sensors opposite each other on a quartz
cylinder. Measures within 90o. - Tri-axial probes for 3D flows
- 3 sensors in an orthogonal system. Measures
within 70o cone.
16Hints to select the right probe
- Use wire probes whenever possible
- ü relatively inexpensive
- ü better frequency response
- ü can be repaired
- Use film probes for rough environments
- ü more rugged
- ü worse frequency response
- ü cannot be repaired
- ü electrically insulated
- ü protected against mechanical and chemical
action
17Modes of anemometer operation
Constant Current (CCA) Constant Temperature
(CTA)
18Constant current anemometer CCA
- Principle
- Current through
- sensor is kept
- constant
- Advantages
- - High frequency
- response
- Disadvantages
- - Difficult to use
- - Output decreases with velocity
- - Risk of probe burnout
19Constant Temperature Anemometer CTA I
- Principle
- Sensor resistance
- is kept constant by
- servo amplifier
- Advantages
- - Easy to use
- - High frequency
- response
- - Low noise
- - Accepted standard
- Disadvantages
- - More complex circuit
20Constant temperature anemometer CTA II
- 3-channel StreamLine with Tri-axial wire probe
55P91
21Modes of operation, CTA I
- Wire resistance can be
- written as
- Rw Ro(1a o(Tw-To))
- Rw wire hot resistance
- Ro wire resistance at To
- a o temp.coeff. of resistance
- Tw wire temperature
- To reference temperature
- Define OVERHEAT RATIO as
- a (Rw-Ro)/Ro a o(Tw-T0)
- Set DECADE overheat resistor as RD (1a)Rw
22Modes of operation, CTA II
- The voltage across wire is given by
- E2 I2Rw2 Rw(Rw - Ra)(A1 B1Un)
- or as Rw is kept constant by the servoloop
- E2 A BUn
-
- Note following comments
- to CTA and to CCA
- - Response is non-linear
- - CCA output decreases
- - CTA output increases
- - Sensitivity decreases
- with increasing U
CTA output as fct. of U
23Dynamic response, CCA I
- Hot-wire Probes
- For analysis of wire dynamic response, governing
equation includes the term due to thermal energy
storage within the wire - W H dE/dt
- The equation then becomes a differential
equation - I2Rw (Rw-Ra)(ABUn) Cw(dTw/dt)
- or expressing Tw in terms of Rw
- I2Rw (Rw-Ra)(ABUn) Cw/a oRo(dRw/dt)
- Cw heat capacity of the wire
- ao temperature coeff. of resistance of the
wire
24Dynamic response, CCA II
- Hot-wire Probes
- The first-order differential equation is
characterised by a single time constant t - t Cw/(aoRo(ABU n)
- The normalised transfer function can be expressed
as - Hwire(f) 1/(1jf/fcp)
- Where fcp is the frequency at which the amplitude
damping is 3dB (50 amplitude reduction) and the
phase lag is 45o. - Frequency limit can be calculated from the time
constant - fcp 1/2pt
25Dynamic response, CCA III
- Hot-wire Probes
- Frequency response of film-probes is mainly
determined by the thermal properties of the
backing material (substrate). - The time constant for film-probes becomes
- t (R/R0)2F2rsCsks/(ABUn)2
- rs substrate density
- Cs substrate heat capacity
- ks substrate heat conductivity
- and the normalised transfer function becomes
- Hfilm(f) 1/(1(jf/fcp)0.5)
-
26Dynamic response, CCA IV
- Dynamic characteristic may be described by the
response to - - Step change in velocity or
- - Sinusoidal velocity variation
27Dynamic response, CCA V
- The hot-wire response characteristic is specified
by -
-
-
- For a 5 µm wire probe in CCA mode t 0.005s,
typically. - (Frequency response can be improved by
compensation circuit) -
(From P.E. Nielsen and C.G. Rasmussen, 1966)
28Dynamic response, CTA I
- CTA keeps the wire at constant temperature, hence
the effect of thermal inertia is greatly reduced - Time constant is reduced to
- t CTA t CCA/(2aSRw)
- where
- a overheat ratio
- S amplifier gain
- Rw wire hot resistance
- Frequency limit
- fc defined as -3dB amplitude
- damping
(From Blackwelder 1981)
29Dynamic response, CTA II
- Typical frequency response of 5 mm wire probe
(Amplitude damping and Phase lag) -
- Phase lag is reduced by frequency dependent gain
(-1.2 dB/octave)
(From Dantec MT)
30Velocity calibration (Static cal.)
- Despite extensive work, no universal expression
to describe heat transfer from hot wires and
films exist. - For all actual measurements, direct calibration
of the anemometer is necessary.
31Velocity calibration (Static cal.) II
- Calibration in gases (example low turbulent free
jet) - Velocity is determined from
- isentropic expansion
-
- Po/P (1(g -1)/2M 2)g /(g- -1)
- a0 (g RT0 )0.5
- a ao/(1(g -1)/2M 2)0.5
- U Ma
-
32Velocity calibration (Static cal.) III
- Film probes in water
- - Using a free jet of liquid issuing from the
bottom of a container - - Towing the probe at a known velocity in
still liquid - - Using a submerged jet
33 Typical calibration curve
- Wire probe calibration with curve fit errors
-
- Curve fit (velocity U as function of output
voltage E) - U C0 C1E C2E2 C3E3 C4E4
-
(Obtained with Dantec 90H01/02)Calibrator)
34Dynamic calibration/tuning I
- Direct method
- Need a flow in which sinusoidal velocity
variations of known amplitude are superimposed on
a constant mean velocity - - Microwave simulation of turbulence (lt500 Hz)
- - Sound field simulation of turbulence (gt500
Hz) - - Vibrating the probe in a laminar flow
(lt1000Hz) - All methods are difficult and are restricted to
low frequencies. -
35Dynamic calibration/tuning II
- Indirect method, SINUS TEST
- Subject the sensor to an electric sine wave
which simulates an instantaneous change in
velocity and analyse the amplitude response.
Typical Wire probe response
Typical Fiber probe response
36Dynamic calibration/tuning III
- Indirect method SQUARE WAVE TEST
- Subject the sensor to an electric sine wave
which simulates an instantaneous change in
velocity and analyse the shape of the anemometer
output -
(From Bruun 1995)
For a wire probe (1-order probe response)
Frequency limit (- 3dB damping) fc 1/1.3 t
37Dynamic calibration
- Conclusion
- Indirect methods are the only ones applicable in
practice. - Sinus test necessary for determination of
frequency limit for fiber and film probes. - Square wave test determines frequency limits for
wire probes. Time taken by the anemometer to
rebalance itself is used as a measure of its
frequency response. - Square wave test is primarily used for checking
dynamic stability of CTA at high velocities. - Indirect methods cannot simulate effect of
thermal boundary layers around sensor (which
reduces the frequency response).
38Disturbing effects (problem sources)
- Anemometer system makes use of heat transfer from
the probe - Qc Nu A (Tw -Ta)
- Nu h d/kf f (Re, Pr, M, Gr,a ),
- Anything which changes this heat transfer (other
than the flow variable being measured) is a
PROBLEM SOURCE! - Unsystematic effects (contamination, air bubbles
in water, probe vibrations, etc.) - Systematic effects (ambient temperature changes,
solid wall proximity, eddy shedding from
cylindrical sensors etc.)
39Problem sourcesProbe contamination I
- Most common sources
- - dust particles
- - dirt
- - oil vapours
- - chemicals
- Effects
- - Change flow sensitivity of sensor (DC drift
of calibration curve) - - Reduce frequency response
- Cure
- - Clean the sensor
- - Recalibrate
-
-
40Problem SourcesProbe contamination II
- Drift due to particle contamination in air
- 5 mm Wire, 70 mm Fiber and 1.2 mm SteelClad
Probes -
(From Jorgensen, 1977)
Wire and fiber exposed to unfiltered air at 40
m/s in 40 hours Steel Clad probe exposed to
outdoor conditions 3 months during winter
conditions
41Problem SourcesProbe contamination IV
- Low Velocity
- - slight effect of dirt on heat transfer
- - heat transfer may even increase!
- - effect of increased surface vs. insulating
effect - High Velocity
- - more contact with particles
- - bigger problem in laminar flow
- - turbulent flow has cleaning effect
- Influence of dirt INCREASES as wire diameter
DECREASES - Deposition of chemicals INCREASES as wire
temperature INCREASES - FILTER THE FLOW, CLEAN SENSOR AND RECALIBRATE!
42Problem SourcesProbe contamination III
- Drift due to particle contamination in water
- Output voltage decreases with increasing dirt
deposit -
(From Morrow and Kline 1971)
43Problem SourcesBubbles in Liquids I
- Drift due to bubbles in water
-
- In liquids, dissolved gases form bubbles on
sensor, resulting in - - reduced heat transfer
- - downward calibration drift
(From C.G.Rasmussen 1967)
44Problem SourcesBubbles in Liquids II
- Effect of bubbling on
- portion of typical
- calibration curve
- Bubble size depends on
- - surface tension
- - overheat ratio
- - velocity
- Precautions
- - Use low overheat!
- - Let liquid stand before use!
- - Dont allow liquid to cascade in air!
- - Clean sensor!
(From C.G.Rasmussen 1967)
45Problem Sources (solved) Stability in Liquid
Measurements
- Fiber probe operated stable in water
-
-
-
- - De-ionised water (reduces algae growth)
- - Filtration (better than 2 mm)
- - Keeping water temperature constant (within
0.1oC)
(From Bruun 1996)
46Problem sourcesEddy shedding I
- Eddy shedding from cylindrical sensors
- Occurs at Re 50
-
- Select small sensor diameters/ Low pass filter
the signal
(From Eckelmann 1975)
47Problem SourcesEddy shedding II
- Vibrations from prongs and probe supports
- - Probe prongs may vibrate due to eddy
shedding from them or due induced vibrations
from the surroundings via the probe support. - - Prongs have natural frequencies from 8 to 20
kHz - Always use stiff and rigid probe mounts.
48Problem SourcesTemperature Variations I
- Fluctuating fluid temperature
- Heat transfer from the probe is proportional to
the temperature difference between fluid and
sensor. - E2 (Tw-Ta)(A BUn)
- As Ta varies
- - heat transfer changes
- - fluid properties change
- Air measurements
- - limited effect at high overheat ratio
- - changes in fluid properties are small
- Liquid measurements effected more, because of
- - lower overheats
- - stronger effects of T change on fluid
properties
49Problem SourcesTemperature Variations II
- Anemometer output depends on both velocity and
temperature -
-
- When ambient temperature increases the velocity
is measured too low, if not corrected for.
(From Joergensen and Morot1998)
50Problem Sources Temperature Variations III
Film probe calibrated at different temperatures
51Problem Sources Temperature Variations IV
- To deal with temperature variations
- Keep the wire temperature fixed (no overheat
adjustment), measure the temperature along and
correct anemometer voltage prior to conversion - Keep the overheat constant either manually, or
automatically using a second compensating sensor. - Calibrate over the range of expected temperature
and monitor simultaneously velocity and
temperature fluctuations.
52Measurements in 2D Flows I
- X-ARRAY PROBES (measures within 45o with respect
to probe axis) - Velocity decomposition into the (U,V) probe
coordinate system -
- where U1 and U2 in wire coordinate system are
found by solving -
53Measurements in 2D Flows II
- Directional calibration provides yaw
coefficients k1 and k2
(Obtained with Dantec 55P51 X-probe and 55H01/H02
Calibrator)
54Measurements in 3D Flows I
TRIAXIAL PROBES (measures within 70o cone around
probe axis)
55Measurements in 3D Flows II
- Velocity decomposition into the (U,V,W) probe
coordinate system -
- where U1 , U2 and U3 in wire coordinate system
are found by solving - left hand sides are effective cooling
velocities. Yaw and pitch coefficients are
determined by directional calibration.
56Measurements in 3D Flows III
- U, V and W measured by Triaxial probe, when
rotated around its axis. Inclination between flow
and probe axis is 20o.
(Obtained with Dantec Tri-axial probe 55P91 and
55H01/02 Calibrator)
57Measurement at Varying TemperatureTemperature
Correction I
- Recommended temperature correction
- Keep sensor temperature constant, measure
temperature and correct voltages or calibration
constants. - I) Output Voltage is corrected before conversion
into velocity
- This gives under-compensation of approx. 0.4/C
in velocity.
Improved correction
Selecting proper m (m 0.2 typically for wire
probe at a 0.8) improves compensation to better
than 0.05/C.
58Measurement at Varying Temperature Temperature
Correction II
- Temperature correction in liquids may require
correction of power law constants A and B -
- In this case the voltage is not corrected
59Data acquisition I
- Data acquisition, conversion and reduction
- Requires digital processing based on
- Selection of proper A/D board
- Signal conditioning
- Proper sampling rate and number of samples
60Data acquisition II
A/D boards convert analogue signals into digital
information (numbers) They have following main
characteristics
- Resolution
- - Min. 12 bit (1-2 mV depending on range)
- Sampling rate
- - Min. 100 kHz (allows 3D probes to be sampled
with approx. 30 kHz per sensor) - Simultaneous sampling
- - Recommended (if not sampled simultaneously
there will be phase lag between sensors of 2-
and 3D probes) - External triggering
- Recommended (allows sampling to be started by
external event)
61Data acquisition III
- Signal Conditioning of anemometer output
-
- Increases the AC part of the anemometer output
and improves resolution - EG(t) G(E(t) - Eoff )
- Allows filtering of anemometer
- - Low pass filtering is recommended
- - High pass filtering may cause phase distortion
of the signal
(From Bruun 1995)
62Data acquisition IV
- Sample rate and number of samples
- Time domain statistics (spectra) require sampling
2 times the highest frequency in the flow - Amplitude domain statistics (moments) require
uncorrelated samples. Sampling interval min. 2
times integral time scale. - Number of samples shall be sufficient to provide
stable statistics (often several thousand samples
are required) - Proper choice requires some knowledge about the
flow aforehand - It is recommended to try to make autocorrelation
and power spectra at first as basis for the choice
63CTA AnemometrySteps needed to get good
measurements
- Get an idea of the flow (velocity range,
dimensions, frequency) - Select right probe and anemometer configuration
- Select proper A/D board
- Perform set-up (hardware set-up, velocity
calibration, directional calibration) - Make a first rough verification of the
assumptions about the flow - Define experiment (traverse, sampling frequency
and number of samples) - Perform the experiment
- Reduce the data (moments, spectra, correlations)
- Evaluate results
- Recalibrate to make sure that the
anemometer/probe has not drifted