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Showing papers on "Glaze ice published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a laminar separation bubble formed on an airfoil at low Reynolds number behind a simulated leading-edge glaze ice accretion is studied experimentally.
Abstract: The separation bubble formed on an airfoil at low Reynolds number behind a simulated leading-edge glaze ice accretion is studied experimentally. Surface pressure and split hot-film measurements as well as flow visualization studies of the bubble reattachment point are reported. The simulated ice generates an adverse pressure gradient that causes a laminar separation bubble of the long bubble type to form. The boundary layer separates at a location on the ice accretion that is independent of angle of attack and reattaches at a downstream location 5-40 percent chord behind the leading edge, depending on the angle of attack. Velocity profiles show a large region of reverse flow that extends up from the airfoil surface as much as 2.5 percent chord. After reattachment, a thick distorted turbulent boundary layer exists. The separation bubble growth and reattachment are clearly seen in the plots of boundary-layer momentum thickness vs surface distance. Local minima and maxima in the boundary-layer momentum thickness development compare well with the shear layer transition point as indicated by the surface pressures and the reattachment point as measured from surface oil flow, respectively.

78 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A 1.05m diameter, horizontal-axis, battery-charging wind turbine was operated at St. Phillips, Nfld, during winter 1990-1991 as discussed by the authors, and the most severe icing resulted from glaze ice accretion that formed in freezing rain and drizzle.

48 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a small horizontal-axis wind turbine was monitored during winter 1990-1991 in Newfoundland and the three-dimensional form of incident glaze ice accretion on the rotor was described.

24 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of surface roughness in the LEWICE ice accretion prediction code was examined, and it was found that roughness is used in two ways: to determine the laminar to turbulent transition location and to calculate the turbulent heat transfer coefficient.
Abstract: Based on previous observations of glaze ice accretion, a 'Multi-Zone' model with distinct zones of different surface roughness is demonstrated. The use of surface roughness in the LEWICE ice accretion prediction code is examined. It was found that roughness is used in two ways: to determine the laminar to turbulent transition location and to calculate the turbulent heat transfer coefficient. A two zone version of the Multi-Zone model is implemented in the LEWICE code, and compared with experimental heat transfer coefficient and ice accretin results. The analysis of the boundary layer transition, surface roughness, and viscous flow field effects significantly increased the accuracy in predicting heat transfer coefficients. The Multi-Zone model was found to greatly improve the ice accretion prediction for the cases compared.

21 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a theory of atmospheric icing due to freezing rain on an overhead line conductor (OHLC) is developed, where the rain falls vertically on a horizontal OHLC that is thermally insulated.

8 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this article, a special test apparatus was developed to measure the tensile strength of impact ices perpendicular to the direction of growth, which consists of a split tube carefully machined to minimize the effect of the joint on impact ice strength.
Abstract: A special test apparatus was developed to measure the tensile strength of impact ices perpendicular to the direction of growth. The apparatus consists of a split tube carefully machined to minimize the effect of the joint on impact ice strength. The tube is supported in the wind tunnel by two carefully aligned bearings. During accretion the tube is turned slowly in the icing cloud to form a uniform coating of ice on the split tube specimen. The two halves of the split tube are secured firmly by a longitudinal bolt to prevent relative motion between the two halves during ice accretion and handling. Tensile test strength results for a variety of icing conditions were obtained. Both glaze and rime ice conditions were investigated. In general, the tensile strength of impact ice was significantly less than refrigerator ice. Based on the limited data taken, the median strength of rime ice was less than glaze ice. However, the mean values were similar.

8 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this article, the upper surface of a rectangular semispan wing with and without simulated glaze ice accretion was measured using the Lidar velocity vector (LDV).
Abstract: LDV measurement results are presented for the upper surface of a rectangular semispan wing with and without simulated glaze ice accretion. Inspection of the model centerline flow field indicates that a large region of reverse flow exists aft of the ice horn on the iced model. At alpha = 0 deg, this region extends to 7 percent chord, while at alpha = 4 deg the bubble grows to more than 12 percent chord. At alpha = 8 deg, the time-averaged separation bubble is measured well beyond 50 percent chord. Experimental and computational flow visualization support these findings. The flow in the vicinity of the ice shape contains many of the features of flow over a backward-facing step.

5 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a mathematical model simulating rime and glaze-ice accretion due to freezing rain on a horizontal plane surface is described, where the thermal transients within the accreted ice are governed by local surface heat and mass transfer balances for the impacting supercooled droplets.

5 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of simulated glaze ice accretion on the aerodynamic performance of a three-dimensional wing is studied experimentally, using a four-beam two-color fiberoptic laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV).
Abstract: The effect of a simulated glaze ice accretion on the aerodynamic performance of a three-dimensional wing is studied experimentally. The model used for these tests was a semi-span wing of effective aspect ratio five, mounted from the sidewall of the UIUC subsonic wind tunnel. The model has an NACA 0012 airfoil section on a rectangular, untwisted planform with interchangeable leading edges to allow for testing both the baseline and the iced wing geometry. A three-component sidewall balance was used to measure lift, drag and pitching moment on the clean and iced model. A four-beam two-color fiberoptic laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV) was used to map the flowfield along several spanwise cuts on the model. Preliminary results from LDV scans, which will be the bulk of this paper, are presented following the force balance measurement results. Initial comparison of LDV surveys compare favorably with inviscid theory results and 2D split hot-film measurements near the model surface.

4 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this article, a two-dimensional experiment was conducted to determine the accuracy of using the helium bubbles as flow tracers, and the results from the three dimensional experiment compare well to the computational simulations.
Abstract: Research was performed to experimentally visualize and document the flow separation due to simulated glaze ice accretion on a NACA 0012 semispan with 30 deg sweep using helium bubbles as flow tracers. Results are compared to Navier-Stokes computational simulations for different angles of attack. Prior to acquiring data for the semispan model, a two dimensional experiment was conducted to determine the accuracy of using the helium bubbles as flow tracers. Results from the three dimensional experiment compare well to the computational simulations.

4 citations


01 Jun 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, a BF Goodrich De-Icing System's PNEumatic Impulse Ice Protection (PIIP) system was tested in the NASA Lewis Icing Research Tunnel (IRT).
Abstract: Tests were conducted on a BF Goodrich De-Icing System's Pneumatic Impulse Ice Protection (PIIP) system in the NASA Lewis Icing Research Tunnel (IRT). Characterization studies were done on shed ice particle size by changing the input pressure and cycling time of the PIIP de-icer. The shed ice particle size was quantified using a newly developed image software package. The tests were conducted on a 1.83 m (6 ft) span, 0.53 m (221 in) chord NACA 0012 airfoil operated at a 4 degree angle of attack. The IRT test conditions were a -6.7 C (20 F) glaze ice, and a -20 C (-4 F) rime ice. The ice shedding events were recorded with a high speed video system. A detailed description of the image processing package and the results generated from this analytical tool are presented.

01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of simulated glaze ice accretion on the aerodynamic performance of a 3D wing is studied experimentally using a NACA 0012 airfoil section.
Abstract: The effect of a simulated glaze ice accretion on the aerodynamic performance of a three-dimensional wing is studied experimentally. Results are reviewed from earlier two-dimensional tests which show the character of the large leading-edge separation bubbles caused by the simulated ice accretion. The 2-D bubbles are found to closely resemble well known airfoil laminar separation bubbles. For the 3-D experiments a semispan wing of effective aspect ratio five was mounted from the sidewall of the UIUC subsonic wind tunnel. The model uses a NACA 0012 airfoil section on a rectangular planform with interchangeable tip and root sections to allow for 0- and 30-degree sweep. A three-component sidewall balance was used to measure lift, drag and pitching moment on the clean and iced model. Fluorescent oil flow visualization has been performed on the iced model and reveals extensive spanwise and vortical flow in the separation bubble aft of the upper surface horn. Sidewall interaction and spanwise nonuniformity are also seen on the unswept model. Comparisons to the computed flow fields are shown. Results are also shown for roughness effects on the straight wing. Sand grain roughness on the ice shape is seen to have a different effect than isolated 3-D roughness elements.