Laser Doppler measurement of inertial particle and bubble accelerations in turbulence

Nicolas Mordant

Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France

I will described an extended laser Doppler technique developed in Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon to track optically the velocity of individual particles in a high Reynolds number turbulent flow. The particle sizes are of the order of the Kolmogorov scale and the time resolution, 30 microseconds, resolves the fastest scales of the fluid motion. Particles are tracked for mean durations of the order of 10 Kolmogorov time scales and their accelerations are measured. As a first benchmark, I will show that this technique matches the performance of the silicon strip detector technique introduced at Cornell University. I will compare the dynamics of the neutral tracers to that of slightly heavier solid particles (density 1.4) and to air bubbles. We observe that the dynamics of the particles strongly depends on their density. Bubbles have a much faster dynamics and experience much higher accelerations than fluid tracers. Although the particles dynamics are different, we find that the probability distribution functions of accelerations normalized to the variance always remain very close to the one for the fluid tracers.

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