ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Development and Implementation of a Technique for Fast Five-Hole Probe Measurements Downstream of a Linear Cascade

Reinaldo A. Gomes    
Julia Kurz and Reinhard Niehuis    

Resumen

Flow measurement using a linear compressor or turbine cascade is a well-established technique to characterize the flow in turbomachines with a certain degree of abstraction. A common way to obtain a general characterization of the flow is to measure the flow downstream of the cascade with a five-hole probe, obtaining, e.g., total pressure losses and flow turning. Pneumatic five-hole probes are used to capture steady or time-averaged flow quantities, if not specified otherwise. In dependency of probe geometry, measurement set-up and flow properties, such measurements can be very time-consuming. Various techniques, in order to decrease the measurement time, are proposed in literature but for certain applications the efforts required to implement such techniques can outweigh the enhanced measurement speed. In this paper, methods proposed by other authors are combined and extended to allow for fast or transient five-hole probe measurements at strongly varying flow conditions. The effectiveness of this method is presented for flow measurements downstream of a compressor cascade with attached and stalled flow (by varying the Reynolds number) as well as with steady and periodically unsteady inflow. The new method allows to reduce the measurement time by up to 90 percent without compromising measurement accuracy. In fact, due to higher spatial resolution, the flow downstream of the cascade can be better resolved with the new method.