Numerical Investigation on Vortex-Induced Rotations of A Triangular Cylinder Using An Immersed Boundary Method
Autor: | Can-ming Chen, Hua-kun Wang, Yuhao Yan, Qiu Zhai, Chunning Ji |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Physics
Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment Mechanical Engineering Reynolds number 020101 civil engineering Ocean Engineering 02 engineering and technology Mechanics Immersed boundary method Oceanography Vortex shedding Rotation 01 natural sciences 010305 fluids & plasmas 0201 civil engineering Vortex Physics::Fluid Dynamics Lift (force) symbols.namesake Drag 0103 physical sciences symbols Cylinder |
Zdroj: | China Ocean Engineering. 33:723-733 |
ISSN: | 2191-8945 0890-5487 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13344-019-0070-0 |
Popis: | A numerical study of vortex-induced rotations (VIRs) of an equivalent triangular cylinder, which is free to rotate in the azimuthal direction in a uniform flow, is presented. Based on an immersed boundary method, the numerical model is established, and is verified through the benchmark problem of flow past a freely rotating rectangular body. The computation is performed for a fixed reduced mass of m*=2.0 and the structural stiffness and damping ratio are set to zero. The effects of Reynolds number (Re=25–180) on the characteristics of VIR are studied. It is found that the dynamic response of the triangular cylinder exhibits four distinct modes with increasing Re: a rest position, periodic rotational oscillation, random rotation and autorotation. For the rotational oscillation mode, the cylinder undergoes a periodic vibration around an equilibrium position with one side facing the incoming flow. Since the rotation effect, the outset of vortex shedding from cylinder shifts to a much lower Reynolds number. Further increase in Re leads to 2P and P+S vortex shedding modes besides the typical 2S pattern. Our simulation results also elucidate that the free rotation significantly changes the drag and lift forces. Inspired by these facts, the effect of free rotation on flow-induced vibration of a triangular cylinder in the in-line and transverse directions is investigated. The results show that when the translational vibration is coupled with rotation, the triangular cylinder presents a galloping response instead of vortex-induced vibration (VIV). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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