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Droplet Impact on a Heated Stainless Steel Surface: Influence of Camera Framing Rate

Published

Author(s)

Samuel L. Manzello

Abstract

The impact of a single water droplet upon a polished stainless steel surface was imaged using a Digital High Speed Camera at 500, 1000, and 15,000 frames per second with shutter speed set to 50 s. The camera was fitted with a 60 mm micro lens to obtain the required spatial resolution to capture droplet impingement. The camera was aligned at an angle n n n a with respect to the horizontal. Surface heating was accomplished using a copper block with two miniature cartridge heaters embedded within it. The surface temperature was controlled within b 1 aC using a temperature controller. The surface temperature and impact Weber number (We = DV2/ z nwhere D is droplet diameter, V is impact velocity z n is density, is surface tension w were fixed for each framing rate at Ts = 345 XC and We = 165, respectively. At 15,000 frames per second, jetting was observed during breakup of the liquid film.
Citation
Journal of Heat Transfer-Transactions of the ASME
Volume
126
Issue
No. 4

Keywords

droplet impact, visualization

Citation

Manzello, S. (2004), Droplet Impact on a Heated Stainless Steel Surface: Influence of Camera Framing Rate, Journal of Heat Transfer-Transactions of the ASME, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=861296 (Accessed April 25, 2024)
Created August 1, 2004, Updated February 19, 2017