Motivation And Objective
The intensity of turbulence affects many fields, such as air pollution and plastic pollution, where turbulence causes pollutants to drift around and spread globally. In addition, due to the intensification of climate change, strong typhoons will generate stronger turbulence, which will affect our survival. Of course, a coin has two sides, the study of turbulence can also be applied to the development of sustainable energy, such as wind energy. In addition, spacecraft that land on other planets are also affected by turbulence.
However, generating turbulent flow with specific properties in a laboratory setting has been a difficult task. Even if the size and energy input of the device are designed to produce the desired velocity, the inherent complexity and unpredictability of turbulence can affect experimental expectations.
Here we introduce a novel experimental facility that can generate homogeneous isotropic turbulence (HIT), which is inspired by the rotating grid concept of Friedman & Katz (2002) and Gopalan & Katz (2008), but their rotors are fixed.