Summary: | This paper reports on the measurements of wall shear stress and static pressure along a smooth static wall upon which jet impingement occurs. The effect of a single circular jet, respectively an array of jets is studied using a high speed/resolution camera. The areas of interest are the stagnation region and the wall jet region, where the jet is deflected from axial to radial direction. The effect of increasing the distance between the inlets is also investigated. The results are obtained by performing direct flow experimental visualizations and CFD numerical simulations, using the Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) approach with the commercial software ANSYS Fluent. The findings suggest that the smaller the nozzle-to-wall distance is, the higher the pressure peak. The wall shear stress has a bimodal distribution; at stagnation point, the wall shear stress is 0. An increase in the number of inlets produces the effect of a decrease in the stagnation point pressure. The greater the inter-inlet distance is, the greater the stagnation point pressure (there is less inter-jet mixing, less energy is lost in vortices formed between jets).
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