Development of a system to measure marine turbulence

Bibliography: leaves 109-113. === Various transducers have been developed turbulent shear in the ocean. The airfoil probe with it's piezoceramic beam encapsulated in a rubber airfoil has the simplest electronic processing system. However, the beam is very fragile and displays unpredictable ther...

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Main Author: Main, Ian Cameron
Other Authors: Jongens, A W D
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6917
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-69172020-12-10T05:11:02Z Development of a system to measure marine turbulence Main, Ian Cameron Jongens, A W D Electrical and Electronic Engineering Bibliography: leaves 109-113. Various transducers have been developed turbulent shear in the ocean. The airfoil probe with it's piezoceramic beam encapsulated in a rubber airfoil has the simplest electronic processing system. However, the beam is very fragile and displays unpredictable thermal effects. An airfoil probe with semiconductor strain gauges on an aluminium cantilever beam has been developed as an alternative to the piezoceramic beam. The probe was calibrated by exciting it with a known shear generated by the water flow from an oscillating nozzle. During the calibration the thermal sensitivity of the probe was established to be -1.7 % °C-1• The probe, along with it's high gain, low noise processing system, is fitted to a tethered free-fall vehicle. A solid state data logger situated in the vehicle is used to record the data generated by the turbulence probe and a pressure transducer. Field trials at St.Helena Bay and Hout Bay showed that the sensitivity of the system is 20 dB lower than that of similar systems using piezoceramic beams. The system is able to resolve turbulent dissipation levels above 10-8 W kg-1, making it useful in regions characterised by a typical mixed layer (dissipation level of 10-W kg-1); however, it's sensitivity is not adequate for deep sea measurements where dissipation levels may be as low as 10-10 W kg-1. 2014-09-05T12:35:58Z 2014-09-05T12:35:58Z 1989 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6917 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Department of Electrical Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical and Electronic Engineering
spellingShingle Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Main, Ian Cameron
Development of a system to measure marine turbulence
description Bibliography: leaves 109-113. === Various transducers have been developed turbulent shear in the ocean. The airfoil probe with it's piezoceramic beam encapsulated in a rubber airfoil has the simplest electronic processing system. However, the beam is very fragile and displays unpredictable thermal effects. An airfoil probe with semiconductor strain gauges on an aluminium cantilever beam has been developed as an alternative to the piezoceramic beam. The probe was calibrated by exciting it with a known shear generated by the water flow from an oscillating nozzle. During the calibration the thermal sensitivity of the probe was established to be -1.7 % °C-1• The probe, along with it's high gain, low noise processing system, is fitted to a tethered free-fall vehicle. A solid state data logger situated in the vehicle is used to record the data generated by the turbulence probe and a pressure transducer. Field trials at St.Helena Bay and Hout Bay showed that the sensitivity of the system is 20 dB lower than that of similar systems using piezoceramic beams. The system is able to resolve turbulent dissipation levels above 10-8 W kg-1, making it useful in regions characterised by a typical mixed layer (dissipation level of 10-W kg-1); however, it's sensitivity is not adequate for deep sea measurements where dissipation levels may be as low as 10-10 W kg-1.
author2 Jongens, A W D
author_facet Jongens, A W D
Main, Ian Cameron
author Main, Ian Cameron
author_sort Main, Ian Cameron
title Development of a system to measure marine turbulence
title_short Development of a system to measure marine turbulence
title_full Development of a system to measure marine turbulence
title_fullStr Development of a system to measure marine turbulence
title_full_unstemmed Development of a system to measure marine turbulence
title_sort development of a system to measure marine turbulence
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6917
work_keys_str_mv AT mainiancameron developmentofasystemtomeasuremarineturbulence
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