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

Daryl J. Monson, +1 more
- Vol. 19, Iss: 6
TLDR
In this paper, 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.
Abstract
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. The method is an advance over past versions in that the troublesome and error-introducing need to measure the distance to the oil leading edge and the starting time for the oil flow has been eliminated. The validity of the method was verified by measuring oil viscosity in the laboratory, and then using those results to measure skin friction beneath the turbulent boundary layer in a low speed wind tunnel. The dual-laser-beam skin friction measurements are compared with Preston tube measurements, with mean velocity profile data in a "law-of-the-well" coordinate system, and with computations based on turbulent boundary-layer theory. Excellent agreement is found in all cases. (This validation and the aforementioned improvements appear to make the present form of the instrument usable to measure skin friction reliably and nonintrusively in a wide range of flow situations in which previous methods are not practical.)

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Citations
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Oil film interferometry in high Reynolds number turbulent boundary layers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used interferometry to measure the thinning rate of an oil film, which is linearly related to the level of shear stress acting on the oil film.
References
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The young person's guide to the data

Donald Coles
TL;DR: The purpose in this introductory lecture is to classify and criticize the available data, so that any comparison of measured and predicted quantities can include some estimate as to the quality and completeness of the various experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

A nonintrusive laser interferometer method for measurement of skin friction

TL;DR: 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.
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