Publication | Closed Access
Stereoscopic digital particle image velocimetry for application in wind tunnel flows
379
Citations
27
References
1997
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyFluid MechanicsStereo ImagingParticle MethodWind Tunnel FlowsDigital Image CorrelationComputational ImagingInstrumentationTime-of-flight ImagingLight Field ImagingOptical Particle SizingLight SheetAerospace EngineeringGeometrical OpticCamera SystemAerodynamicsFlow MeasurementLaser Light SheetImagingCamera Technology
The stereoscopic PIV system uses a Scheimpflug imaging configuration with high‑resolution synchronized cameras and a pulsed Nd‑YAG laser, calibrated via projection equations, to capture forward‑scatter images of micron‑sized seeding particles over a large viewing angle, enabling non‑symmetric setups for industrial wind tunnels. The system accurately recovers the out‑of‑plane velocity component and was validated by imaging the unsteady flow field of a vortex ring in a laboratory setting.
A particle image velocimetry system capable of accurately recovering the out-of-plane velocity component has been realized based on a stereoscopic viewing arrangement. To allow a large viewing angle with long focal length objective lenses, the angular displacement or Scheimpflug imaging configuration is employed in which the image, object and lens planes intersect in a common line. The varying magnification factor associated with this imaging configuration is accounted for using an accurate and simple-to-use calibration procedure based on solving the projection equations for each of the two cameras. A pair of high-resolution cameras, both capable of recording image pairs in the microsecond range, are synchronized to a pulsed Nd-YAG laser. By placing the cameras on either side of the light sheet the favourable light scattering characteristics of micron-sized seeding particles in forward scatter provide images at significantly higher illumination than at normal or backscatter viewing angles. Ultimately designed for use in industrial wind tunnels, the camera system is capable of working with non-symmetric arrangements. It has been successfully tested in a laboratory environment by imaging the unsteady flow field of a vortex ring passing through a laser light sheet.
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