About the Wind Tunnel

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The UC Davis Atmospheric Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel (UCD-ABLWT) was specifically designed to model the turbulent characteristics of the atmospheric boundary layer. The atmospheric boundary layer is a layer of air covering the earth in which the airflow is influenced by viscosity (fluid friction). Since the thickness of atmospheric boundary layer is determined by the height at which surface friction no longer affects the general flowroughnessthumb of the wind, the boundary layer thickness depends on the shape and condition on the surface.

 

 Wind tunnel facility

The tunnel is an open return type with an overall length of 70 ft (21m). The entrance section has a contraction area that minimizes the freestream turbulence level of the air as it passes through the section. A commercially available air filter follows the contraction area. The filter reduces the large scale pressure fluctuations of the flow and limits the size of airborne particles entering the wind tunnel. Large scale turbulence is reduced by honeycomb flow straighteners. Three triangularly shaped spires are placed directly downstream of the flow straighteners to provide favorable turbulent characteristics in the boundary layer flow.

The flow development section is 40 ft (12.2 m) long and has walls that diverge to reduce the pressure gradient in the flow direction. Roughness elements are placed on the floor of this section to artificially thicken the boundary layer. Thick boundary layer flow is desired, since larger models can be tested and thus measurements of higher resolution can be made. The wind tunnel was specificallablwt1thumby designed to develop a boundary layer thickness of about 3 ft (1 m) with a maximum full-scale wind speed of 13 ft/s (4.0 m/s) in the test section.

The test section is 8 ft (2.44 m) long, 5.5 ft (1.71 m) high, and 4 ft (1.2 m) wide in the cross section. The ceilings of the flow development section are adjustable for longitudinal pressure gradient control. Access to the test section is through a framed acrylic door, which serves as one of the two vertical acrylic walls. Six clamps each on the top and bottom of the door, as well as two large clamps at easmoketestingthumbch end, are used to seal the door. Additional sealing is achieved by the use of O-ring surgical tubing that was pressurized and placed around the edges of the door and between it and the metal frame.

In the test section, a three dimensional probe positioning mechanism provides fast and accurate sensor placement. The scissor arms of the mechanism, which monitors vertical probe motion, are made of aerodynamically shaped struts to minimize flow disturbances. Gases can be injected into the tunnel either for flow visualization or to simulate smoke stack emissions.

 

The diffuser section is 7.8 ft (2.37 m) long and has an expansion area that provided a continuous transition from the rectangular cross sectional area of the test section to the circular cross sectional area of the fan. To eliminate upstream fan swirl effects and avoid flow separation in the diffuser ablwtthumbsection, fiberboard and honeycomb flow straighteners are placed between the fan and diffuser sections.

 

The fan, 6 ft (1.83 m) in diameter, has eight constant pitch blades and is driven by a 75 horsepower variable speed DC motor. A dual belt and pulley drive system couples the motor and the fan.

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