Mechanical Engineering

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    Impact of Polymeric Drops on Drops and Films of a Different but Miscible Polymer
    (2024) Bera, Arka; Das, Siddhartha; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    The fluid mechanics of a liquid drop impacting on another stationery (or spreading) liquid drop or on a liquid film (of thickness comparable, or smaller, or larger than the impacting drop) has attracted significant attention over the past several years. Such problems represent interesting deviations from the more widely studied problems of liquid drops impacting on solid surfaces having different wettabilities with respect to the impacting drops. These deviations stem from the fact that the resting liquid (in the form of the drop or the film) itself undergoes deformation on account of the drop impact and can significantly affect the overall combined drop-drop or drop-film dynamics. The problem becomes even more intriguing depending on the rheology of the drop(s) and the film as well as the (im)miscibility of the impacting drop with the underlying drop or the film. Interestingly, the majority of such drop-impact-on-drop or drop-impact-on-film studies have considered Newtonian drop(s) and films, with little attention to polymeric drop(s) and films. This thesis aims to bridge that void by studying, using Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) based computational methods, the impact-driven dynamics of one polymeric drop on another (different but miscible) polymeric drop or film. As specific examples, we consider two separate problems. In the first problem, we consider the impact of a PMMA (poly-methyl methacrylate) drop on a resting PVAc (polyvinyl acetate) drop as well as the impact of a PVAc drop on a resting PMMA drop. In the second problem, we consider the impact of a PMMA drop on a PVAc film as well as the impact of a PVAc drop on a PMMA film. For the first problem, the wettability of the resting drop (on the resting surface), the Weber number of the impacting drop, the relative surface tension values of the two polymeric liquids (PVAc and PMMA), and the miscibility (or how fast the two liquids mix) dictate the overall dynamics. PVAc has a large wettability on silicon (considered as the underlying solid substrate); as a result, during the problem of the PMMA drop impacting on the PVAc drop, the PVAc drop spreads significantly and the slow mixing of the two liquids ensures that the PMMA drop spreads as a thin film on top of the PVAc film (formed as the PVAc drop spreads quickly on silicon). Depending on the Weber number, such a scenario leads to the formation of transient liquid films (of multitudes of shapes) with stratified layers of PMMA (on top) and PVAc (on bottom) liquids. On the other hand, for the case of the PVAc drop impacting on the PMMA drop, a combination of the weaker spreading of the PMMA drop on silicon and the “engulfing” of the PMMA drop by the PVAc drop (stemming from the PVAc having a smaller surface tension than PMMA) ensures that the impacting PVAc drop covers the entire PMMA drop and itself interacts with the substrate giving rise to highly intriguing transient and stratified multi-polymeric liquid-liquid structures (such as core-shell structure with PMMA core and PVAc shell). For both these cases, we thoroughly discuss the dynamics by studying the velocity field, the concentration profiles (characterizing the mixing), the progression of the mixing front, and the capillary waves (resulting from the impact-driven imposition of the disturbance). In the second problem, we consider a drop of the PMMA (PVAc) impacting on a film of the PVAc (PMMA). In addition to the factors dictating the previous problem, the film thickness (considered to be either identical or smaller than the drop diameter) also governs the overall droplet-impact-driven dynamics. Here, the impact, being on the film, the dynamics is governed by the formation of crown (signifying the pre-splashing stage) and a deep cavity (the depth of which is dictated by the film thickness) on the resting film. In addition to quantifying these facets, we further quantify the problem by studying the velocity and the concentration fields, the capillary waves, and the progression of the mixing front. For the PMMA drop impacting on the thin film, a noticeable effect is the quick thinning of the PMMA drop on the PVAc film (or the impact-driven cavity formed on the PVAc film), which gives rise to a situation similar to the previous study (development of transient multi-polymeric-liquid structures with stratified polymeric liquid layers). For the case of the PVAc drop impacting on the PMMA film, the PVAc liquid “engulfs” the deforming PMMA film, and this in turn, reduces the depth of the cavity formed, the extent of thinning, and the amplitude of the generated capillary waves. All these fascinating phenomena get captured through the detailed DNS results that are provided. The specific problems considered in this thesis have been motivated by the situations often experienced during the droplet-based 3D printing processes (e.g., Aerosol jet printing or inkjet printing). In such printing applications, it is commonplace to find one polymeric drop interacting with an already deposited polymeric drop or a polymeric film (e.g., through the co-deposition of multiple materials during multi-material printing). The scientific background for explaining these specific scenarios routinely encountered in 3D printing problems, unfortunately, has been very limited. Our study aims to fill this gap. Also, the prospect of rapidly solidifying these polymeric systems (via methods such as in-situ curing) can enable us to visualize the formation of solidified multi-polymeric structures of different shapes (by rapidly solidifying the different transient multi-polymeric-liquid structures described above). Specifically, both PMMA and PVAc are polymers well-known to be curable using in-situ ultraviolet curing, thereby establishing the case where the present thesis also raises the potential of developing PMMA-PVAc multi-polymeric solid structures of various shapes and morphologies.
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    MULTI-FIDELITY PARAMETRIC SENSITIVITY FOR LARGE EDDY SIMULATION
    (2023) Oberoi, Nikhil; Larsson, Johan Prof.; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Designing engineering systems involving fluid flow under uncertainty or for optimality often requires performing many computational fluid dynamics (CFD) calculations. For low-fidelity turbulence modeling simulations such as Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS), such a framework has been established and is in use. However, for high-fidelity turbulence-resolving simulations such as large eddy simulations (LES), the relatively high computational cost of even a single calculation hinders the development of such a framework. The overarching goal of this work is to aid LES in becoming a usable engineering design tool. In this thesis, a computationally affordable approach to estimate parametric sensitivities of engineering relevant quantities of interest in an LES is explored. The method is based on defining a RANS problem that is constrained to reproduce the LES mean flow field. The proposed method is described and assessed for a shock/boundary layer interaction problem, where the shock angle and wall temperature are considered variable or uncertain. In the current work, a proof-of-concept of the proposed method is demonstrated. The method offers qualitative improvements to the sensitivity prediction of certain flow features as compared to standalone RANS simulations, while using a fraction of the LES cost. Different cost functions to infer auxiliary RANS variables are also examined and their influence on the sensitivity estimation is assessed. Overall, the results serve as an important proof-of-concept of the method and suggests the most promising path for future developments.
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    Simulation of polymeric drop dynamics: Effect of photopolymerization, impact velocity, and multi-material coalescence
    (2023) Sivasankar, Vishal Sankar; Das, Siddhartha; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Over the past couple of decades, additive manufacturing has emerged as one of the most promising manufacturing tools and has rightfully garnered the attention of researchers across various fields ranging from biochemistry and medicine to energy and infrastructure. Especially, direct-ink-writing methods (e.g., inkjet printing, aerosol jet printing, or AJ printing, etc.) have been widely studied because of their ability to print highly complex geometries with finer resolution. In order to design a more efficient droplet-based direct ink writing system, it is essential to understand the deposition process and the post-deposition dynamics of the drop. The post-deposition drop dynamics dictate the spreading radius of the drop and hence the print resolution. Such an understanding is even more critical when there are multiple drops interacting with each other, given the fact that such interactions determine the presence/absence of surface defects in addition to determining the print resolution. Moreover, to have a holistic understanding of the post-deposition process, it is essential to further account for the droplet solidification mechanisms (for example, through effects such as in-situ curing) that might interplay with multiple drop dynamics events (such as drop spreading, drop coalescence, drop impact, etc.). In this dissertation, computation fluid dynamics (CFD) frameworks have been developed to investigate the facets dictating the post-deposition dynamics of one (or several) solidifying polymer drops, with these dynamics show-casing the different post-deposition events that are intrinsic to the droplet-based additive manufacturing processes. First, we considered a situation where the polymeric drop undergoes simultaneous spreading and photopolymerization, with the timescales of the spreading and photopolymerization events being τ? and τ? respectively. The findings from this work confirmed the significant impact of the ratio of timescales (τ? and τ?) on the thermo-fluidic-solutal dynamics of the polymeric drops. Moreover, the evolution of the curing front showed distinct behaviors as a function of the timescale ratio.Subsequently, the effect of the interaction of multiple polymeric drops during the post-deposition event, as seen in the typical printing process, was investigated. Specifically, we studied the effect of drop impact on the coalescence dynamics of two polymeric drops of identical and different sizes. The study revealed the presence of two distinct stages of coalescence. The early-stage coalescence was found to be enhanced with an increase in the impact velocity; however, the late-stage coalescence behavior remained unaffected by the impact velocity. Further, the coalescence dynamics of polymeric drops of different materials, as witnessed in multi-jet printing, was probed. This study shed light on the mechanisms that drive the mixing process at different stages of drop coalescence. Finally, we evaluated the effects of the in-situ photopolymerization on the coalescence dynamics of multiple polymeric drops deposited on a substrate. Here too the comparative values of the drop dynamics timescale and the photopolymerization became important. Our results show three-distinct regimes characterizing the bridge growth which was further validated through physics-based theoretical scaling. This study would provide key insights into the direct-ink writing process and would aid in designing parameters for polymer-based additive manufacturing and product repair.
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    Explorations of Carbon-Nanotube-Graphene-Oxide Inks: Printability, Radio-Frequency and Sensor Applications, and Reliability
    (2022) Zhao, Beihan; Das, Siddhartha SD; Dasgupta, Abhijit AD; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Carbon-Nanotube (CNT) is a novel functional material with outstanding electrical and mechanical properties, with excellent potential for various kinds of industrial applications. Additive manufacturing or 3D printing of CNT-based materials or inks has been studied extensively, and it is vital to have a thorough understanding of the fluid mechanics and colloidal science of CNT-based inks for ensuring optimum printability and the desired functionality of such CNT-based materials.In this dissertation, a custom-developed syringe-printable CNT-GO ink (GO: Graphene Oxide) is introduced and the fluid mechanics and colloidal science of this ink as well as the different devices (e.g., temperature sensor, humidity sensor, and RF antenna) fabricated with this ink are studied. The following topics are discussed in this dissertation: (1) the application and printability (in terms of the appropriate fluid mechanics and colloidal science) of CNT-based inks; (2) development of temperature sensors with CNT-GO inks; (3) development of humidity sensors with CNT-GO inks; (4) development of RF patch antenna with CNT-GO inks; and (5) evaporation-driven size-dependent nano-microparticulate three-dimensional deposits (CNTs serve as one type of nanoparticle examined in this part of the study). In Chapter 1 of this dissertation, a literature review is conducted on the application of CNT-based inks and the fluid mechanics and colloidal science issues dictating the printability and performance of such CNT-based inks. The problem statement and overall research plan are also introduced in this chapter. In Chapter 2, the development of our custom CNT-GO ink is introduced. Detailed material selection and the mechanism of shape-dependent arrest of coffee-stain effect, which ensured that the printable ink led to uniform deposition, are discussed in this chapter. Temperature sensor prototypes printed with the CNT-GO inks are also presented in Chapter 2. From Chapter 3 to Chapter 5, the performances of our CNT-GO based flexible temperature sensor, humidity sensor, and patch antenna prototypes are discussed. The ink printability on flexible thin PET films is studied, and a straightforward ‘peel-and-stick’ approach to use the CNT-trace (or patch)-bearing PET films on surfaces of widely varying wettabilities and curvatures as different prototypes is introduced. Excellent temperature and humidity sensitivity of our CNT-GO based sensors are presented in Chapter 3 and Chapter 4, and the potential of this CNT-GO material for fabrication of ultra-wideband (UWB) patch antennas is discussed in Chapter 5. Furthermore, the stability and reliability of these printed CNT-GO-based prototypes are also explored. In previous Chapters, the printed CNT-GO patterns were cured by evaporation-mediated deposition on flat substrates (i.e., 2D deposition spanning in x and y directions). This motivated the extension of the physics to the 3rd dimension and probing of particle deposition on a 3D substrate and particle deposition in all x, y, and z directions. Therefore, in Chapter 6, we perform an experiment to demonstrate this kind of possibility using three kinds of micro-nanoparticle-laden water-based droplets (i.e. coffee particles, silver nanoparticles, and CNTs). These droplets were first deposited at the bottom of an un-cured PDMS film; these droplets were lighter than the PDMS and hence, they rose to the top of the PDMS where they could have either attained a Neuman like state or simply remained as an undeformed spherical drop with the top of the drop breaching the air-liquid-PDMS interface. The calculations based on air-water, water-PDMS, and air-PDMS surface tension values confirmed that the Neuman like state was not possible, and the droplets were likely to retain their undeformed shapes as they breached the air-PDMS interface. The timescale differences between the fast PDMS curing and the slower droplet evaporation, led to the formation of spherical shape cavities inside the PDMS after completion of the curing, and allowed evaporation-driven deposition to occur in all x, y, and z directions inside the cavity, with the exact nature of the deposition being dictated by the sizes of the particles (as confirmed by the experiments conducted with coffee particles, silver nanoparticles, and CNTs). Finally, in Chapter 7, the major contributions of this dissertation and proposed future studies related to this dissertation work are listed.
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    THERMAL MANAGEMENT OF INTEGRATED MOTORS FOR ELECTRIC PROPULSION
    (2022) Yao, Zhaoxi; McCluskey, Francis P; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Electrification of traditional combustion power units has been a major trend. The low emissions, low noise and high efficiency characteristic of electrified power, fit the vision of a low carbon emission future. The development of high power density electric motors is key to facilitating large scale, heavy duty applications. The demand for dense power leads to significant heat flux, causing thermal management to become one of the main obstacles in developing high power density electric motors. Multiple components in the motor generate heat. For example, the motor of interest in this paper is a 1 MW, high power density, surface mounted permanent magnet motor, with a segmented and laminated stator on the outside, and a laminated rotor on the inside. Heat is generated in the stator winding, stator core, magnets, rotor core as well as the motor drive. For high speed motors, windage loss could also be significant in the air gap. Among the heat-generating components, the stator winding is the primary heat source. For this study, a comprehensive thermal management solution was developed. The power density of the motor, based on active mass, exceeded 22 kW/kg and majority of the loss came from the stator windings. Thus, a dedicated direct winding cooling combined with an integrated cooling jacket were deployed. Multiple winding cooling schemes were explored, such as investment-casted cooling channels in potting, hollow conductors, flooded slots and Litz-wire-wrapped cooling tubes. The flooded slots with scaffolding-shaped spacer were chosen in the end, which demonstrate good thermal performance, low pumping power, pressure requirements and low risk of partial discharge as the dielectric coolant also served as liquid insulation. A cooling jacket with integrated power module cooling was designed to cool the stator core and power modules. The cooling jacket included a compression sleeve, which served as the mechanical support to hold the stator segments as well as the cooling surface for the stator cores, and nine cold plates, hosting 18 power modules on top, placed around the curved outer surface of the motor. The cooling concepts were designed, simulated and validated by testing. A functioning prototype was constructed and in the process of testing.
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    Development and Application of Solid-Liquid Lattice Boltzmann Model for Phase Change Material in Heat Exchanger
    (2022) Chen, Dongyu; Radermacher, Reinhard; Riaz, Amir; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Phase change materials (PCMs) are widely used in thermal energy storage systems, as they can absorb and release a large amount of heat during the phase change process. Numerical simulations can be used for parametric studies and analysis of the thermal performance of the PCM heat exchanger (HX) to produce an optimal design. Among various numerical methods, the lattice Boltzmann method (LBM), a mesoscopic approach that considers the molecular interactions at relatively low computation costs, offers certain key advantages in simulating the phase change process compared with the conventional Navier-Stokes-based (NS-based) methods. Moreover, LBM is ideal for parallel computing, by which numerical analysis can be efficiently performed. Therefore, a comprehensive solid-liquid phase change model is developed based on LBM which is capable of accurately and efficiently simulating the process of convective PCM phase change with and without porous media in both Cartesian and axisymmetric domains. Double distribution functions (DDF) coupled with a multi-relaxation-time (MRT) scheme are utilized in the LBM formulation for the simulation of the fluid flow and the temperature field. A differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) correlated equation is applied in LBM to model enthalpy, by which the solid-liquid interface can be automatically tracked. The source term in the MRT scheme is modified to eliminate numerical errors at high Rayleigh numbers. Moreover, the conjugate thermal model is adopted for the consideration of heat transfer fluid (HTF) flow and conducting fins. The new model is verified and validated by various case studies. The results indicate that the new model can successfully predict the process of PCM phase change with errors confined to less than 10\%. Parametric studies are then performed using the validated model to quantitatively evaluate the effect of convection on PCM melting, from which the acceleration rates (\(a_c\)) of PCM melting and the threshold Rayleigh numbers (\(Ra_{dc}\)) at various aspect ratios are defined and quantified. Furthermore, PCM melting in porous cylindrical HX is also investigated. The results indicate that the acceleration of melting could reach 95\% compared to that in pure PCM at 60\% energy storage. Moreover, the negative effect of uneven temperature distributions on thermal performance of the HX caused by convection is quantified and analyzed. A modified cylindrical HX that offsets this negative effect by varying the geometry is also evaluated. The results indicate that the modified geometry can successfully enhance heat transfer and balance the uneven temperature distributions.
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    Burning Emulations of Condensed Phase Fuels Aboard The International Space Station
    (2022) Dehghani, Parham; Sunderland, Peter B; Quintiere, James G; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Little is known about the fire hazards of solids and liquids in microgravity. Ground-based tests are too short to overcome ignition transients and testing dozens of condensed fuels in orbit is prohibitively expensive. Burning rate emulation is one way to address this gap. It involves emulating condensed fuels with gases using a porous burner with embedded heat flux gages. This is a study of microgravity burning rate emulation aboard the International Space Station. The burner had porous round surfaces with a diameter of 25 mm. The fuel mixture was gaseous ethylene, and it was diluted with various amounts of nitrogen. The resulting heats of combustion were 15 – 47.2 kJ/g. The flow rate, oxygen concentration in the ambient, and pressure were varied. Heat flux to the burner was measured with two embedded heat flux gages and a slug calorimeter. The effective heat of gasification was determined from the heat flux divided by the fuel flow rate. Radiometers provided the radiative loss fractions. A dimensional analysis based on radiation theory yielded a relationship for radiative loss fraction. RADCAL, a narrow-band radiation model, yielded flame emissivities from the product concentrations, temperature, flame length, and pressure. Previously published analytical solutions to these flames allowed prediction of flame heights and radius, and when combined with the radiation empirical relationship led to corrections of total heat release rate from the flames due to radiative loss. Average convective and radiative heat flux were obtained from the analytical solution and a model based on the geometrical view factor of the burner surface with respect to the flame sheet, that was used to calculate the heat of gasification. All flames burning in 21% by volume oxygen self-extinguished within 40 s. However, steady flames were observed at 26.5, 34, and 40% oxygen. The analytical solution was used to quantify flame steadiness just before extinction. The steadiest flames reached more than 94% of their steady-state heat fluxes and heights. A flammability map as a plot of the heat of gasification versus heat of combustion was developed based on the measurement and theory for nominal ambient oxygen mole fractions of 0.265, 0.34, and 0.4.  
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    ADAPTIVITY IN WALL-MODELED LARGE EDDY SIMULATION
    (2022) Kahraman, Ali Berk; Larsson, Johan; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    In turbulence-resolving simulations, smaller eddies account for most of the computational cost. This is especially true for a wall-bounded turbulent flow, where a wall-resolved large eddy simulation might use more than 99% of the computing power to resolve the inner 10% of the boundary layer in realistic flows.The solution is to use an approximate model in the inner 10% of the boundary layer where the turbulence is expected to exhibit universal behavior, a technique generally called wall-modeled large eddy simulation. Wall-modeled large-eddy simulation introduces a modeling interface (or exchange location) separating the wall-modeled layer from the rest of the domain. The current state-of-the-art is to rely on user expertise when choosing where to place this modeling interface, whether this choice is tied to the grid or not. This dissertation presents three post-processing algorithms that determine the exchange location systematically. Two algorithms are physics-based, derived based on known attributes of the turbulence in attached boundary layers. These algorithms are assessed on a range of flows, including flat plate boundary layers, the NASA wall-mounted hump, and different shock/boundary-layer interactions. These algorithms in general agree with what an experienced user would suggest, with thinner wall-modeled layers in nonequilibrium flow regions and thicker wall-modeled layers where the boundary layer is closer to equilibrium, but are completely ignorant to the cost of the simulation they are suggesting. The third algorithm is based on the sensitivity of the wall-model with the predicted wall shear stress and a model of the subsequent computational cost, finding the exchangelocation that minimizes a combination of the two. This algorithm is tested both a priori and a posteriori using an equilibrium wall model for the flow over a wall-mounted hump, a boundary layer in an adverse pressure gradient, and a shock/boundary-layer interaction. This third algorithm also produces exchange locations that mostly agree with what an experienced user would suggest, with thinner layers where the wall-model sensitivity is high and thicker layers where this sensitivity is low. This suggests that the algorithm should be useful in simulations of realistic and highly complex geometries.
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    A MULTI-FIDELITY APPROACH TO SENSITIVITY ESTIMATION IN LARGE EDDY SIMULATIONS
    (2022) Arias Ramírez, Walter; Larsson, Johan; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    An approach to compute approximate sensitivities in a large eddy simulation (LES) is proposed and assessed.The multi-fidelity sensitivity analysis (MFSA) solves a linearized mean equation, where the mean equation is based on the LES solution. This requires closure modeling which makes the computed sensitivities approximate. The closure modeling is based on inferring the eddy viscosity from the LES data and in predicting the change in turbulence (or the perturbed eddy viscosity) using a simple algebraic model. The method is assessed for the flow over a NACA0012 airfoil at a fixed angle of attack, with the Reynolds number as the varying parameter and the lift, drag, skin friction, and pressure coefficients as the quantities-of-interest. The results show the importance of accurate closure modeling, specifically that treating the eddy viscosity as "frozen" is insufficiently accurate. Also, predictions obtained using the algebraic model for closing the perturbed eddy viscosity are closer to the true sensitivity than results obtained using the fully RANS-based method which is the state-of-the-art and most common method used in industry. The proposed method aims to complement, rather than replace, the current state-of-the-art method in situations in which sensitivities with higher fidelity are required.
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    DETAILED PIV MEASUREMENTS ON PARTICLE-TURBULENCE INTERACTION IN OSCILLATORY SHEET FLOW: IN DILUTE REGIME
    (2022) LIU, CHANG; Kiger, Kenneth KK; Mechanical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    An experimental investigation of sediment transport mechanisms under oscillatory sheet flow condition is conducted. Focus is placed upon the dilute regime of solid-liquid transport with volume concentrations C=0.01, where significant fluid turbulence is present, strong particle-turbulence interaction occurs and inter-particle collisions can be neglected. Understanding the coupling dynamics between phases is critical for the validation and improvement of the existing numerical models. Simultaneous determination of the dynamics of each phase is often prohibitively expensive to acquire by direct numerical simulation and poses significant challenges to experimental measurements. In our experiment, a U-shaped water tunnel is used to create highly repeatable oscillatory sheet flow conditions over a mobile bed. The test section of the tunnel is 375 cm in length, with a cross-sectional area of 30X45 cm^2. The sediment is modeled using narrowly sorted spherical soda lime glass beads with a mean diameter of d=240 \mu m and a specific gravity of s=2.5. The efforts have been made in two directions: the measurement technique development and the application of the developed technique to an oscillatory sheet flow. First, a novel measurement technique, based upon Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV), was developed and validated, that aims for a simultaneous measurement of both phases. For the sediment phase measurement, the multi-camera single-plane (MCSP) method was developed to reconstruct particle's instantaneous 3D positions towards a higher concentration. This was followed by Lagrangian particle tracking (LPT) to link the reconstructed particles over successive frames, with an in-house developed algorithm based upon shake-the-box (STB, Schanz et al. Experiments in Fluids 2016). For the carrier phase measurement, stereoscopic PIV (SPIV) was implemented. In order to reduce the cross-talk errors due to the presence of sediment particles, the apertured filter method was developed to produce adequate image quality of both phases allowing for a reliable extraction of each phase independently. Second, the developed measurement technique was applied in a sinusoidal oscillatory sheet flow (period, T=5 s, and peak free stream velocity, Uo,p=1 m/s) to provide a whole field, phase-locked time-resolved, particle resolved and concurrent measurement of both the fluid and the sediment phase in the dilute regime (C<0.01). Such detailed measurements in sheet flow have never been reported before to the author's best knowledge. The analysis of the acquired data focused upon three phase angles when the external flow is reversing the direction. It has been found that during flow reversal, 1) distinct particle suspension mechanisms are identified in the upper dilute regime (y>11 mm) and the lower dilute regime (211 mm, while the over-sampling diminishes towards the bed; and 3) the particle velocity and their ambient fluid velocity show a strong correlation for y>11 mm and the correlation becomes weaker as approaching the bed.