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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A nonintrusive laser interferometer method for measurement of skin friction

D. J. Monson
- 01 Jan 1983 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1, pp 15-22
TLDR
In this article, a method is described for monitoring the changing thickness of a thin oil film subject to an aerodynamic shear stress using two focused laser beams, which is then simply analyzed in terms of the surface skin friction of the flow, including the effects of arbitrarily large pressure and skinfriction gradients, gravity, and time-varying oil temperature.
Abstract
A method is described for monitoring the changing thickness of a thin oil film subject to an aerodynamic shear stress using two focused laser beams. The measurement is then simply analyzed in terms of the surface skin friction of the flow. The analysis includes the effects of arbitrarily large pressure and skinfriction gradients, gravity, and time-varying oil temperature. It may also be applied to three-dimensional flows with unknown direction. Applications are presented for a variety of flows including two-dimensional flows, three-dimensional swirling flows, separated flows, supersonic high-Reynolds-number flows, and delta-wing vortical flows.

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NASA Technical Memorandum 84300
NASA-TM-84300 19830004123
A NonintrusiveLaserInterferometer
Methodfor Measurementof
SkinFriction
Daryl J. Monson
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October 1982
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NASA Technical Memorandum 84300
A NonintrusiveLaserInterferometer
Methodfor Measurementof
SkinFriction
Daryl J. Monson, Ames ResearchCenter, Moffett Field, California
NASA
NationalAeronautics and
SpaceAdministration
Ames ResearchCenter
MoffettField,California94035
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Abstract
A method is described for monitoring the changing thickness of a thin oil film
subject to an aerodynamic shear stress using two focused laser beams. The measure-
ment is then simply analyzed in terms of the surface skin friction of the flow.
The analysis includes the effects of arbitrarily large pressure and skin-friction
gradients, gravity, and time-varying oil temperature. It may also be applied to
three-dimensional flows with unknown direction. Applications are presented for a
variety of flows including two-dlmensional flows, three-dimensional swirling flows,
separated flows, supersonic high Reynolds number flows, and delta-wing vortical
flows.

Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Laser interferometer skin-friction measurements of crossing-shock-wave/turbulent-boundary-layer interactions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a laser interferometer skin-friction meter, a device that determines the wall shear by optically measuring the time rate of thinning of an oil film placed on the test model surface.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Can We Ever Rely on Results from Wall-Bounded Turbulent Flows without Direct Measurements of Wall Shear Stress?

TL;DR: In this article, three techniques for measuring skin friction in two-dimensional turbulent wall-bounded shear flows are presented: oil-film interferometry, hot wires mounted near the wall, and surface hot-film sensors based on MEMS technology.

The Thin Oil Film Equation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented analytical and numerical methods for solving the thin oil film equation, where the wall shear stress variation on the surface is known and a direct numerical solver is developed where the oil film thickness spatial variation over the surface at two discrete times is known.
Journal ArticleDOI

Skin friction measurements by laser interferometry in swept shock/boundary-layer interactions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured wall shear stresses in swept interactions of planar shock waves generated by a sharp fin and the two-dimensional turbulent boundary layer on a flat plate using the Laser Interferometer Skin Friction (LISF) meter.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An outline of the techniques available for the measurement of skin friction in turbulent boundary layers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss force-measurement balances, the use of the velocity profile, pressure measurements by surface pitot tubes or about obstacles, and the analogies of heat transfer, mass transfer or surface oil flow.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of the motion of oil films on surfaces in air flow, with application to the measurement of skin friction

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple relation is obtained between the film thickness variation and the skin friction distribution, and the results confirm the theory and show that the method gives reasonably accurate measurements of skin friction distributions in low speed flows.
Journal ArticleDOI

A skin friction meter, using the viscosity balance principle, suitable for use with flat or curved metal surfaces (based on thickness measurement)

TL;DR: In this paper, a laser beam focused at position x, reflects partly from the oil surface and partly from a metal substrate, and the reflected beams are focused on a photocell and the pen recorder output gives an interferometric record of y against t.
Journal ArticleDOI

Skin Friction Measurements by a Dual-Laser-Beam Interferometer Technique

TL;DR: In this article, a portable dual-laser-beam interferometer that nonintrusively measures skin friction by monitoring the thickness change of an oil film subject to shear stress is described.
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