Experimental Investigation of Droplet Formation and Droplet Sizes Behind a Side Mirror

2022-01-5107

12/27/2022

Event
Automotive Technical Papers
Authors Abstract
Content
The investigation of vehicle soiling by improvement of vehicle parts to optimize the surrounding airflow is of great importance not only because of the visibility through windows and at mirrors but also the functionality of different types of sensors (camera, lidar, radars, etc.) for the driver assistance systems and especially for autonomous driving vehicles has to be guaranteed. These investigations and corresponding developments ideally take place in the early vehicle development process since later changes are difficult to apply in the vehicle production process for many reasons. Vehicle soiling is divided into foreign soiling and self-soiling with respect to the source of the soiling water, e.g., direct rain impact, swirled (dirty) water of other road users and own rotating wheels.
The investigations of the soiling behavior of vehicles were performed experimentally in a wind tunnel and street tests. The investigations of self-soiling are assisted numerically by computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations at the early development stage. An investigation of droplet formation behind a side mirror was done with a generic side mirror. These information are important for the simulation of the side window and side mirror soiling to speed up the simulation process and to validate the simulation results. A full-size car was examined in a wind tunnel to achieve an extensive understanding of the processes of droplet formation behind a side mirror. The identification of droplet breakup and detachment processes and the measurement of the resulting droplet sizes are the main goals of these studies. The corresponding experimental measurements of droplet velocity and size were carried out by using high-speed cameras and a shadowgraphy measuring technique.
A detailed insight into the physical processes of droplet detachment and breakup behind the side mirror on a complete vehicle is shown, which can be used in the future for the development of soiling countermeasures but especially for the validation and comparison of complex three-dimensional (3D) soiling simulations.
The droplet detachment process can be divided into the position and the physical process. The detachment position is velocity dependent. At higher air velocities, the detachment position shifts outwards toward the edge of the mirror housing. Different physical processes can be observed for the different air velocities. At the lower velocity of 80 km/h, a ligament formation process can be observed, which changes to a sheet formation (laminar and later turbulent) with increasing air velocity. The type of secondary breakup processes occurring is independent of the air velocity. In addition, droplet sizes were measured, and the distributions show two main peaks at 35 μm and 55 μm independent of the airstream velocity, which could be attributed to the break-off process and secondary decay.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2022-01-5107
Pages
14
Citation
Kille, L., Strohbücker, V., Niesner, R., Sommer, O. et al., "Experimental Investigation of Droplet Formation and Droplet Sizes Behind a Side Mirror," SAE Technical Paper 2022-01-5107, 2022, https://doi.org/10.4271/2022-01-5107.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Dec 27, 2022
Product Code
2022-01-5107
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English