Abstract |
An application of oil film interferometry (OFI) to measure skin friction on the 3D flow over an NACA 0015 airfoil with 30° of sweep is presented. Local flow direction must be known to apply OFI to complex 3D flows such as this. A recently developed surface flow vector extraction method was integrated into the OFI analysis algorithm. Surface flow vectors were used to calculate the surface streamlines and hence provided local flow direction to the OFI analysis. After calibration using photogrammetry, the surface flow vectors also enabled decomposition of the skin friction coefficient into different components (such as chordwise and spanwise). The presented method successfully measured skin friction at locations with different flow characteristics such as high skin friction regions, strong spanwise flow regions, and 3D flow separated regions. In the current OFI analysis, multiple interferogram images acquired at different times were analyzed for the same location. The multiple interferogram analysis enabled averaging, which reduced the scatter in the skin friction data. The results presented herein demonstrate the capability of the current approach, thereby extending OFI skin friction measurements to complex 3D flows. |