- Ludwieg tube
A Ludwieg tube is a cheap and efficient way of producing supersonic flow. Mach numbers up to 4 are easily obtained without any additional heating of the flow, with heating Mach numbers of up to 11 can be reached.
Principle
A Ludwieg tube is a
wind tunnel that produces supersonic flow for short periods of time. A large evacuated dump tank is separated from the downstream end of aconvergent-divergent nozzle by a diaphragm or fast acting valve. The upstream end of the nozzle connects to a long cylindrical tube, whose cross-sectional area is significantly larger than the throat area of the nozzle. Initially, the pressure in the nozzle and tube is high. To start the tunnel, the diaphragm is ruptured, e.g., by piercing it with a suitable cutting device, or opening the valve respectively. As always when a diaphragm ruptures, ashock wave propagates into the low-pressure region (here dump tank) and anexpansion wave propagates into the high-pressure region (here the nozzle and long tube). As this unsteady expansion propagates through the long tube, it sets up a steadysubsonic flow toward the nozzle, which is accelerated by theconvergent-divergent nozzle to asupersonic condition. The flow is steady until the expansion, having been reflected from the far end of the tube, arrives at the nozzle again. For practical reasons, flow times are on the order of 100 milliseconds. For many purposes this is a flow duration that is quite sufficient.History
The Ludwieg Tube was invented by Hubert Ludwieg (1912-2000) in 1955 in response to a competition for a
transonic orsupersonic wind tunnel design that would be capable of producing highReynolds number at low operating cost. Professor Ludwieg was also responsible for the experimental demonstration and explanation of the large effect of sweep on the drag oftransonic wings (his dissertation in 1937).See also
*
Shock tube
*Supersonic wind tunnel
*Hypersonic wind tunnel External links
* [http://ludwieg.caltech.edu Ludwieg Tube Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology]
* [http://www.zarm.uni-bremen.de/2forschung/aero/gb/facilities/bhhk/index.htm Heated Ludwieg Tube at the ZARM in Bremen, Germany]
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