Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4924772 Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics 2017 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
A large-eddy simulation method of calculating the flow past an elastically-supported body, has been constructed based on the finite difference method formulated in the coordinates fixed on the moving body. The boundary conditions on the body can be applied in the same way as on a fixed body. Reconstruction of computational mesh or interpolation of the computational points is not needed as the body moves. The coding of the method is simple and the computation is efficient, but the equations of motion must be written in the non-inertial coordinates and the boundary conditions on the outer boundaries of the flow domain that also move must be adjusted as the orientation of the body changes. The method has been tested in the computation of the flow past a rectangular cylinder supported by a spring and dashpot and the motion of the cylinder for which experimental data are available. Comparison with experimental data in the case of a rectangular cylinder of depth to breadth ratio of D/B=2 indicates that the characteristics of the translational oscillation corresponding to the heaving of long beams and the rotational oscillation corresponding to the torsional deformation are reproduced well.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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