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The TU Wien Turbulent Water Channel: Flow control loop and three-dimensional reconstruction of anisotropic particle dynamics

Review of Scientific Instruments 2023 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Vlad Giurgiu, Vlad Giurgiu, Vlad Giurgiu, Giuseppe Carlo Alp Caridi, Vlad Giurgiu, Mobin Alipour, Giuseppe Carlo Alp Caridi, Giuseppe Carlo Alp Caridi, Giuseppe Carlo Alp Caridi, Mobin Alipour, Marco De Paoli, Marco De Paoli, Giuseppe Carlo Alp Caridi, Alfredo Soldati Marco De Paoli, Alfredo Soldati Alfredo Soldati Alfredo Soldati Alfredo Soldati

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics; it describes the design and validation of a turbulent water channel facility at TU Wien built to study the dynamics of complex-shaped particles in turbulent flow, with applications to industrial and environmental fluid mechanics.

Polymers

A horizontal water channel facility was built to study particle dynamics in a turbulent flow. The channel is sufficiently long to produce fully developed turbulence at the test section, and the width-to-height ratio is sufficiently large to avoid the sidewall effect for a large proportion of the cross-section. The system was designed to study the dynamics of complex-shaped particles in wall-bounded turbulence, the characteristics of which can be finely controlled. A maximum bulk velocity of up to 0.8 m s-1 can be achieved, corresponding to a bulk Reynolds number of up to 7 × 104 (shear Reynolds number ≈1580), and flow parameters can be controlled within ±0.1%. The transparent channel design and aluminum structures allow easy optical access, which enables multiple laser and camera arrangements. With the current optical setup, a measurement volume of up to 54 × 14 × 54 mm3 can be imaged and reconstructed with six cameras from the top, bottom, and sides of the channel. Finally, the in-house developed reconstruction and tracking procedure allows us to measure the full motion of complex objects (i.e., shape reconstruction, translational, and rotational motions), and in this instance, it is applied to the case of microscopic, non-isotropic polyamide fibers.

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