Abstract
We numerically study the transverse flow-induced vibration (FIV) of elastically coupled tandem cylinders at Reynolds number
$100$
, using an in-house immersed boundary method-based solver in two-dimensional coordinates. While several previous studies considered tandem cylinders coupled through flow between them, a hitherto unexplored elastic coupling with fluid flow between them significantly influences FIV. We consider a wide range of gap ratio, reduced velocity, an equal mass ratio of both cylinders and zero damping. A systematic comparison between the classic elastically mounted tandem cylinders and elastically coupled cylinders is presented. The latter configuration exhibits two vibration modes, in-phase and out-of-phase, with corresponding natural frequencies approaching the Strouhal frequency of the system. We quantify variation of the following output variables with reduced velocity and gap ratios: cylinders’ displacement; fluid forces; amplitude spectral density of displacement and force signals; phase characteristics; energy harvesting potential; and discuss the wake characteristics using flow separation, pressure distribution, gap flow quantification, and dynamic mode decomposition characterization. The FIV response is classified into several regimes: initial desynchronization with and without gap vortices; final desynchronization; mixed mode; initial branch; lock-in; upper and lower branch; wake-induced vibration; galloping. We draw upon similarities of computed FIV characteristics with those of an isolated cylinder, in which the lower branch exhibits larger a amplitude than the upper branch. The elastically coupled cylinders show a galloping response similar to an isolated D-section cylinder. By invoking the elastic coupling, we demonstrate FIV suppression and augmentation for in-phase and out-of-phase systems. Our calculations show larger energy harvesting potential at reduced cost for elastically coupled cylinders.
Funder
Science and Engineering Research Board
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,Applied Mathematics
Cited by
2 articles.
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