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Thermophysics and Aeromechanics

2014 year, number 2

Three measuring techniques for assessing the mean wall skin friction in wall–bounded flows

E.-S. Zanoun1, L. Jehring2, and C. Egbers2
1 The American University in Cairo, New Cairo, Egypt
2 BTU Cottbus, Cottbus, Germany
E-mail: ezanoun@aucegypt.edu
Keywords: wall skin friction, laser-Doppler, oil film, hot film, heat conducting and insulating materials

Abstract

The present paper aims at evaluating the mean wall skin friction data in laminar and turbulent boundary layer flows obtained from two optical and one thermal measuring techniques, namely, laser-Doppler anemometry (LDA), oil-film interferometry (OFI), and surface hot-film anemometry (SHFA), respectively. A comparison among the three techniques is presented, indicating close agreement in the mean wall skin friction data obtained, directly, from both the OFI and the LDA near-wall mean velocity profiles. On the other hand, the SHFA, markedly, over estimates the mean wall skin friction by 3.5–11.7% when compared with both the LDA and the OFI data, depending on the thermal conductivity of the substrate and glue material, probe calibration, probe contamination, temperature drift and Reynolds number. Satisfactory agreement, however, is observed among all three measuring techniques at higher Reynolds numbers, Rex > 106, and within ±5% with empirical relations extracted from the literature. In addition, accurate velocity data within the inertial sublayer obtained using the LDA supports the applicability of the Clauser method to evaluate the wall skin friction when appropriate values for the constants of the logarithmic line are utilized.