Abstract: | Measurements of the velocity and energy spectra were made in the distal region of modeled stenoses in a rigid tube with both steady and pulsatile water flows. Reynolds numbers of 318–2540 and a pulsatile flow frequency parameter of 15 were employed. The effects of the degree of stenosis, the stenosis geometry and the presence or absence of the downstream confining wall on the development of flow disturbances were investigated. Visualization of the distal flow patterns in stenotic and free jets illustrated the existence of complex fields which included vortex shedding, highly turbulent regions, and recirculation zones. Significant flow disorder was created by a mild stenosis in pulsatile, but not in steady, flow. Nondimensionalization employing the stenosis diameter and flow velocity in the throat of the constriction correlates the vortex shedding frequency and energy spectra within a limited postestenotic region. |