Difference between revisions of "Acoustic Doppler velocimetry (ADV)"

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(Created page with "=Quick summary= thumb|250px|Figure 1: file:bms_vortex_tube.png|thumb|250px|Figure 2: (a) Conceptual sketch of the vortex tube functionality and (b) v...")
 
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=Application=
 
=Application=
Within the scope of FIThydro, a BMS consisting of a geophone and accelerometer was installed on the vortex tube at HPP Schiffmühle, which diverts bedload from the headwater channel to the residual flow reach. The vortex tube consists of a steel tube embedded in the side weir, connecting the two parallel channels (Figure 2). A gate valve is positioned in the side weir, which opens automatically when a predefined discharge is exceeded. The opening of the valve automatically triggers the BMS measurements.
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ADV has been extensively used in flow field characterization in fish migration and fishways studies. Odeh et al. (2002) used ADV to characterize flow turbulence to evaluate its effects on the behaviour of downstream migratory juvenile fish. Puertas et al. (2004) and Liu et al. (2006) conducted ADV measurements to characterize flow patterns and turbulence structures of flow in vertical slot fishways laboratory scale models. To assess the effects of water velocity and turbulence on the behaviour of Iberian barbel in an indoor full scale experimental pool-type fishway with orifices, Silva et al. (2011) used ADV measurements. Also in an indoor full scale experimental pool-type fishway with orifices, Santos et al. (2012) assessed the effect of two flow regimes, created by boulder placement in the flume bottom, in the upstream movements of Iberian barbel by performing ADV measurements to characterize the flow field. Branco et al. (2013) used ADV to characterize the water velocity and turbulence to evaluate the behaviour of two different morpho-ecological cyprinid species facing plunging and streaming flows in an indoor full scale experimental pool-type fishway with orifices and notches. To characterize a vertical slot fishway turning pool flow and validate a CFD model Marriner et al. (2014) performed ADV measurements on the Vianney-Legendre vertical slot fishway in Quebec, Canada. Bombač et al. (2015) performed extensive field measurements of the flow in a VSF, at the Arto – Blanca hydropower plant, and used these measurements to calibrate and verify a CFD model. To assess the effects of hydrodynamics on fish behaviour, and evaluate the upstream passage performance of a potamodromous cyprinid, over an experimental broad-crested weir, Amaral et al. (2016) characterized the flow pattern downstream of the weir with ADV. An et al. (2016) validated a three-dimensional CFD model of a VSF by carrying out velocity measurements in a physical model with ADV. Romão et al. (2017) used ADV measurements to characterize the flow hydrodynamics in an indoor full-scale pool-type fishway for two different vertical slot configurations. Quaresma et al. (2018) used these data to calibrate and validate a three-dimensional CFD model subsequently used to compare the hydrodynamics of two widely used vertical slot fishways (VSF) configurations and three multi slot fishway (MSF) configurations.
 
 
In contrast to the SPGS, the steel tube is used as an impact plate for the BMS and the sensors are mounted directly onto the outside of the steel tube (Figure 3). Therefore, laboratory calibration was not easily possible. Instead, the system was calibrated in the field by repeatedly dumping sediment samples of known grain size distribution and volume upstream of the vortex tube and subsequently flushing them to the residual flow reach. In addition, drop tests with single grains were performed when the vortex tube was not in operation. The single grain signals help to analyze the influence of grain size, grain form, drop height, and drop location on the amplitude and frequency signals.
 
 
 
The first results of the presented BMS are promising, but the data analysis will be further refined and extended. Furthermore, a larger number of recorded flood events is necessary to check the plausibility of the results obtained so far. Overall, it is demonstrated that the measurement principle of the state-of-the-art SPGS can be extended to non-standardized impact plates like steel vortex tubes, and the use of an additional accelerometer sensor, given that appropriate calibration measures are taken.
 
  
 
=Other information=
 
=Other information=

Revision as of 08:26, 19 June 2019

Quick summary

Figure 1:
Figure 2: (a) Conceptual sketch of the vortex tube functionality and (b) vortex tube outlet at HPP Schiffmühle (source: VAW).
Figure 3: (a) Vortex tube outlet with mounted sensors and (b) vortex tube running during the field calibration (source: VAW).

Developed by: Nortek, SonTek

Date: February 2019

Type: Device

Suitable for the following [[::Category:Measures|measures]]:

Introduction

Acoustic Doppler velocimetry (ADV) is a velocity measurement technique that allows for the measurement of 3D flow velocities by using the Doppler shift principle. ADV operates by emitting short acoustic pulses along a transmitter beam, the central transducer. As the sound bursts propagate through the water, a fraction of the acoustic energy is scattered back by ambient scatterers such as suspended sediments and microbubbles (Kraus et al. 1994, Lohrmann et al. 1995, McLelland & Nicholas 2000).

The ADV comprises a probe connected to the main housing, which contains the electronics, by either a rigid stem or a cable (Figure 62a, b and c). The main housing is connected to a computer by a cable. The sampling volume is located away from the probe (Figure 62d), which reduces the interference of the probe with the flow and measurement point. The reduced probe size also minimizes the flow interference. The probe consists of a transmitter and three or four receivers (Figure 62b and c), which are equally angled and symmetrically arranged around the transmitter (Khorsandi et al. 2012). The fourth receiver provides redundancy improving turbulence measurements. The transmitter emits ultrasound (short acoustic pulse) at a known frequency and the receivers get back the echo of ultrasound (sound-scattering particles) reflected in the water particles with a different frequency. The difference between the frequency emitted and reflected is proportional to water velocity.

The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is a measure of the scattering strength, representing the strength of the echo relative to the electronic noise level, and it is a central parameter in ADV operation (Kraus et al. 1994). The acoustic echoes originated at the sampling volume, defined by the intersection of the transmitter and receivers beams (Figure 62d), are detected by the receivers’ transducers. The frequency of the echo is Doppler shifted according to the relative motion of the scatterers, assumed to be travelling with the velocity of the fluid flow. The Doppler shift observed at each receiver is proportional to the component of the flow velocity along the bisector of the receiver and transmitter beams. The radial or beam velocities are computed sequentially for each receiver and are then converted to a local Cartesian coordinate system (ux, uy, uz) by using a transformation matrix. This transformation matrix is determined empirically by the manufacturer by calibrating the system at one speed and will remain constant if the physical dimensions or geometry of the probe remain unchanged (Kraus et al. 1994, Lohrmann et al. 1995, McLelland & Nicholas 2000).

The ADV uses a dual pulse-pair scheme with different pulse repetition rates separated by a dwell time (McLelland & Nicholas 2000, García et al. 2005). The longer pair of pulses is used for higher precision velocity estimates while the shorter pulse is used for ambiguity resolution, assuming that the real velocity is beyond the limit resolvable by the longer time lag (García et al. 2005). The pulse repetition rates can be adjusted by choosing the instrument velocity range.

It is a widely used technique due to its capability to measure the three components of instantaneous velocities, its robustness and portability, the fact that it does not require calibration and its relatively low cost (Khorsandi et al., 2012, Quaresma et al., 2017). It is also suitable for laboratory and field applications.

ADVs capability of accurately measuring time-averaged velocities has been referred by Lemmin & Rolland (1997), Voulgaris & Trowbridge (1998), Quaresma et al. (2017). On the other hand, the quality of turbulence quantities computed from ADV data has been questioned, and the need for post-processing emphasized (Hurther & Lemmin 2001, Goring & Nikora 2002, Blanckaert & Lemmin 2006, Cea et al. 2007, Parsheh et al. 2010, Khorsandi et al. 2012, Montero et al. 2014, Quaresma et al. 2017). Moreover, it is a point-wise measurement technique, therefore, obtaining maps of time-averaged turbulent flow variables involves placing one single probe in several successive positions, which is time-consuming, or deploying multiple probes (which may be too expensive and impractical) (Quaresma et al. 2017).

It is known that the precision of ADV measurements in turbulent flows is affected by random spikes, including sampling errors linked with analogue/digital conversion, and the Doppler ambiguity process, characterized by the amplitude modulation of the backscattered signal related to the transit time of the acoustical targets through the sampling volume (this error is independent of the flow and depends on the pulse length, set by the velocity range), Doppler noise (which is intrinsic to the measurement principle and is associated with the random motion of targets in the sampling volume), and errors due to the mean velocity gradients in the sampling volume and associated to spatial averaging of the instantaneous flow field within the sampling volume and unresolved turbulent scales that are of the same order of magnitude or smaller than the sampling volume’s transverse size (Garbini et al. 1982, Voulgaris & Trowbridge 1998, McLelland & Nicholas 2000, Hurter & Lemmin 2001, Goring & Nikora 2002, Khorsandi et al. 2012). The spatial averaging of fluctuating motion contributes to reducing the variance of the signal; all the other sources of error contribute to increasing it (Hurter & Lemmin 2001).

In recent years several papers have been focusing on the theoretical and experimental identification and characterization of noise sources affecting the turbulence measurements performed with ADV (Garbini et al. 1982, Lohrmann et al. 1994, Voulgaris & Trowbridge 1998, McLelland & Nicholas 2000, Hurther & Lemmin 2001, García et al. 2005). Even when all the manufacturers’ precautions are taken into consideration, the signal will have a noise level that affects the values of turbulence parameters (García et al. 2005).

Several post-processing filters have been proposed to reduce the effect of noise resulting from random spikes, namely the phase-space thresholding despiking method of Goring & Nikora (2002), the velocity correlation filter of Cea et al. (2007), and the modified phase-space thresholding despiking method of Parsheh et al. (2010).

On the other hand, the Doppler noise is “white” noise with a Gaussian probability distribution and a flat power spectrum (McLelland & Nicholas 2000, Hurther & Lemmin 2001, García et al. 2005). White noise does not affect the mean velocity values because it has zero mean. Lohrmann et al. (1994), Voulgaris & Trowbridge (1998) and McLelland & Nicholas (2000) showed that the ADV can accurately predict mean velocity and Reynolds shear stresses.

Hurther & Lemmin (2001) proposed a correction method for subtracting the contribution of noise from the mean turbulent parameters. This method takes advantage of the bistatic four-receiver configuration of some ADV instruments, and consequent redundancy in the measurements of the velocity along the axis of the ADV. The variance of the noise and the noise spectrum can thus be determined. The geometrically weighted noise spectrum is then subtracted from the spectra of the longitudinal components. Turbulence intensities are obtained by integration of the latter.

Application

ADV has been extensively used in flow field characterization in fish migration and fishways studies. Odeh et al. (2002) used ADV to characterize flow turbulence to evaluate its effects on the behaviour of downstream migratory juvenile fish. Puertas et al. (2004) and Liu et al. (2006) conducted ADV measurements to characterize flow patterns and turbulence structures of flow in vertical slot fishways laboratory scale models. To assess the effects of water velocity and turbulence on the behaviour of Iberian barbel in an indoor full scale experimental pool-type fishway with orifices, Silva et al. (2011) used ADV measurements. Also in an indoor full scale experimental pool-type fishway with orifices, Santos et al. (2012) assessed the effect of two flow regimes, created by boulder placement in the flume bottom, in the upstream movements of Iberian barbel by performing ADV measurements to characterize the flow field. Branco et al. (2013) used ADV to characterize the water velocity and turbulence to evaluate the behaviour of two different morpho-ecological cyprinid species facing plunging and streaming flows in an indoor full scale experimental pool-type fishway with orifices and notches. To characterize a vertical slot fishway turning pool flow and validate a CFD model Marriner et al. (2014) performed ADV measurements on the Vianney-Legendre vertical slot fishway in Quebec, Canada. Bombač et al. (2015) performed extensive field measurements of the flow in a VSF, at the Arto – Blanca hydropower plant, and used these measurements to calibrate and verify a CFD model. To assess the effects of hydrodynamics on fish behaviour, and evaluate the upstream passage performance of a potamodromous cyprinid, over an experimental broad-crested weir, Amaral et al. (2016) characterized the flow pattern downstream of the weir with ADV. An et al. (2016) validated a three-dimensional CFD model of a VSF by carrying out velocity measurements in a physical model with ADV. Romão et al. (2017) used ADV measurements to characterize the flow hydrodynamics in an indoor full-scale pool-type fishway for two different vertical slot configurations. Quaresma et al. (2018) used these data to calibrate and validate a three-dimensional CFD model subsequently used to compare the hydrodynamics of two widely used vertical slot fishways (VSF) configurations and three multi slot fishway (MSF) configurations.

Other information

The total costs for the geophone and accelerometer sensors amount to approx. 885-1'330 €. The costs for the field computer, the analog-digital-converter, and the 3G modem are approx. 5'300-6'200 €. Additional costs for the installation, data transmission, and the calibration depending on the site conditions and set-up.

Relevant literature

  • Albayrak, I., Müller-Hagmann, M., Boes, R.M. (2017). Calibration of Swiss Plate Geophone System for bedload monitoring in a sediment bypass tunnel. In Proc. 2nd Intl. Workshop on Sediment Bypass Tunnels (Sumi, T., ed.), paper FP16, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
  • Gray, J.R., Laronne, J.B., Marr, J.D.G. (2010). Bedload-surrogate Monitoring Technologies, US Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5091. US Geological Survey: Reston VA.
  • Rickenmann, D., Turowski, J.M., Fritschi, B., Klaiber, A., Ludwig, A. (2012). Bedload transport measurements at the Erlenbach stream with geophones and automated basket samplers. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 37, 1000-1011.
  • Rickenmann, D., Turowski, J.M., Fritschi, B., Wyss, C., Laronne, J., Barzilai, R., Reid, I., Kreisler, A., Aigner, J., Seitz, H., Habersack, H. (2014). Bedload transport measurements with impact plate geophones: comparison of sensor calibration in different gravel-bed streams. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 39, 928-942.
  • Wyss, C.R., Rickenmann, D., Fritschi, B., Turowski, J.M, Weitbrecht, V., Boes, R.M. (2016a). Laboratory flume experiments with the Swiss plate geophone bed load monitoring system: 1. Impulse counts and particle size identification. Water Resources Research, 52, 7744-7759.
  • Wyss, C.R., Rickenmann, D., Fritschi, B., Turowski, J.M, Weitbrecht, V., Boes, R.M. (2016b). Laboratory flume experiments with the Swiss plate geophone bed load monitoring system: 2. Application to field sites with direct bed load samples. Water Resources Research, 52, 7760-7778.


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