bschena
Mechanical
- Jan 19, 2006
- 8
Is anyone aware of any way to measure the surface shear-force field (2D distribution of shear forces) created by an impinging fluid jet?
As an analogy, think of shooting a garden hose at a wall, creating the circular flow pattern. I want to know (to some decent spatial resolution) the shear stresses/forces across the wetted area as the jet impinges and then flows off in all directions on the surface of the wall.
I'm thinking a sensor like this must exist in the world of aerodynamics/wind-tunnel testing, etc.
I'm aware of force sensing films (like Tekscan and others), but to my knowledge they only measure normal (compressive) forces. I sort of want the shear version of that product, though a shear/normal force combo would be ideal.
I'm also open to other crazy ways to do this - like using photochromic paints and the like...
Double extra credit if you can think of a way to do the same thing, though over some type of 3D structure - think of spraying the garden hose on a rock.
Ideas? Leads? Thanks!
As an analogy, think of shooting a garden hose at a wall, creating the circular flow pattern. I want to know (to some decent spatial resolution) the shear stresses/forces across the wetted area as the jet impinges and then flows off in all directions on the surface of the wall.
I'm thinking a sensor like this must exist in the world of aerodynamics/wind-tunnel testing, etc.
I'm aware of force sensing films (like Tekscan and others), but to my knowledge they only measure normal (compressive) forces. I sort of want the shear version of that product, though a shear/normal force combo would be ideal.
I'm also open to other crazy ways to do this - like using photochromic paints and the like...
Double extra credit if you can think of a way to do the same thing, though over some type of 3D structure - think of spraying the garden hose on a rock.
Ideas? Leads? Thanks!