Discussion on "Resurrecting a Neglected Measurement Technique for Air-Water Flows"
Matthias Kramer, Hang Wang, and Daniel B. Bung

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new signal processing method to differentiate entrained and entrapped air in air-water flows using existing phase-detection probe data, potentially replacing older measurement techniques and aiding model development.
Contribution
A simple discrimination technique for phase-detection signals is introduced, enabling differentiation of air contributions from existing datasets, advancing measurement and modeling of air-water flows.
Findings
The method can differentiate entrained and entrapped air signals.
It can potentially replace the dipping probe technique.
It aids validation of non-intrusive measurement methods.
Abstract
Over the last years, there has been a renewed interest in differentiating various contributions to the air concentration in high Froude-number self-aerated flows, see for example Kramer (2024), comprising entrained and entrapped air. The former is characterized by entrained air packets and bubbles, while entrapped air corresponds to air transported along wave peaks and troughs. Entrapped air was first measured by Killen (1968) using a so-called dipping probe, while a physical interpretation of the dipping probe signals was provided only later by Wilhelms and Gulliver (2005). Since then, it has been commonly accepted that two different measurement instruments, for example a dipping probe and a common phase-detection probe, are required to fully quantify entrained and entrapped air. Recently, an article entitled "Resurrecting a Neglected Measurement Technique for Air-Water Flows" was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFlow Measurement and Analysis · Water Systems and Optimization
