Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5017456 Journal of Fluids and Structures 2017 21 Pages PDF
Abstract
The two-degree-of-freedom (2DOF) vortex-induced vibration (VIV) of a circular cylinder with varying in-line to cross-flow natural frequency ratios (f∗=fnx∕fny) is studied using a three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) approach. Numerical simulation is carried out for a constant mass ratio of 2 at a fixed Reynolds number Re=500. The reduced velocity ranges from 2 to 12. Three natural frequency ratios are considered, i.e., f∗=1,1.5 and 2. The structural damping is set to zero to maximise the response of the cylinder. The main objective of this study is to investigate the effect of f∗ on the 2DOF VIV responses and the 3D characteristics of the flow. It is discovered that there is a significant increase in the vibration amplitude, and the peak amplitude shifts to a higher reduced velocity when f∗ increases from 1 to 2. A single-peak cross-flow response is observed for the identical in-line and cross-flow mass ratios when f∗=2. Dual resonance is found to exist over the range of f∗ studied. The preferable trajectories of the cylinder in the lock-in range are counterclockwise figure-eight orbits. Oblique figure-eight trajectories appear at Vr=6,7 and 8 when f∗=1. The third harmonic component which is observed in the lift fluctuation increases with f∗. The correlation decreases in the lock-in range and reaches its minimum value around the transition region between the lock-in and post-lock-in ranges. Three vortex shedding modes (2S, P + S and 2P) appear in the present simulation. A dominant P + S mode is associated with the oblique figure-eight trajectories. Variation of vortex shedding flows along the cylinder is observed leading to the poor correlation of the sectional lift forces.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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