Author:
MÜCK B.,GÜNTHER C.,MÜLLER U.,BÜHLER L.
Abstract
This paper presents a numerical simulation of the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
liquid metal flow around a square cylinder placed in a rectangular duct. In the
hydrodynamic case, for a certain parameter range the well-known Kármán vortex
street with three-dimensional flow patterns is observed, similar to the flow around
a circular cylinder. In this study a uniform magnetic field aligned with the cylinder
is applied and its influence on the formation and downstream transport of vortices
is investigated. The relevant key parameters for the MHD flow are the Hartmann
number M, the interaction parameter N and the hydrodynamic Reynolds number, all
based on the side length of the cylinder. The Hartmann number M was varied in the
range 0 [les ] M [les ] 85 and the interaction parameter N in the range 0 [les ] N [les ] 36. Results
are presented for two fixed Reynolds numbers Re = 200 and Re = 250. The magnetic
Reynolds number is assumed to be very small. The results of the numerical simulation
are compared with known experimental and theoretical results. The hydrodynamic
simulation shows characteristic intermittent pulsations of the drag and lift force on
the cylinder. At Re = 200 a mix of secondary spanwise three-dimensional instabilities
(A and B mode, rib vortices) could be observed. The spanwise wavelength of the
rib vortices was found to be about 2–3 cylinder side lengths in the near wake. At
Re = 250 the flow appears more organized showing a regular B mode pattern and
a spanwise wavelength of about 1 cylinder side length. With an applied magnetic
field a quasi-two-dimensional flow can be obtained at low N ≈ 1 due to the strong
non-isotropic character of the electromagnetic forces. The remaining vortices have
their axes aligned with the magnetic field. With increasing magnetic fields these
vortices are further damped due to Hartmann braking. The result that the ‘quasi-two-dimensional’ vortices have a curvature in the direction of the magnetic field can be
explained by means of an asymptotic analysis of the governing equations. With very
high magnetic fields the time-dependent vortex shedding can be almost completely
suppressed. By three-dimensional visualization it was possible to show characteristic
paths of the electric current for this kind of flow, explaining the action of the Lorentz
forces.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
92 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献