Fluid-Elastic Lock-in of a Cavity Shear Layer Instability With the Modes of a Submerged Cantilevered Beam

Author:

Cody Kristin L.1,Jonson Michael L.2,Pollack Martin L.3,Hambric Stephen A.2

Affiliation:

1. Naval Nuclear Laboratory, P.O. Box 79, West Mifflin, PA 15122

2. Applied Research Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University, P.O. Box 30, State College, PA 16804

3. Applied Physical Sciences Corporation, 475 Bridge Street, Suite 100, Groton, CT 06340

Abstract

AbstractLock-in flow tones can occur for many different types of flow instabilities and structural-acoustic resonators at low Mach number. This paper examines the interaction between a shear layer instability generated by flow over a shallow cavity and the modes of an elastic cantilevered beam containing the cavity. A describing function model indicates that a cavity shear layer instability capable of producing lock-in with acoustic pipe resonances cannot achieve lock-in with equivalent structural beam resonances, particularly resonances of submerged structures. Fluid-elastic cavity lock-in is unlikely to occur due to the high level of damping that exists for a submerged structure, the high fluid-loaded modal mass, and the relatively weak source strength a cavity generates. Limited experimentation using pressure, acceleration, and particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements has been performed which are consistent with the describing function model. A stronger source produced by a larger scale flow instability—separated flow over a bluff body—was able to lock-in with modes of the same submerged structure, further demonstrating that the concern for lock-in from a cavity shear layer instability is isolated to systems capable of stronger coupling or those dominated by fluid-acoustic resonances.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

General Engineering

Reference32 articles.

1. Review—Self-Sustaining Oscillations of Flow Past Cavities;Rockwell;ASME J. Fluids Eng.,1978

2. Shallow Cavity Flow Tone Experiments: Onset of Locked-On States;Rockwell;J. Fluids Struct.,2003

3. Flow-Induced Cavity Resonance in Viscous Compressible and Incompressible Fluids;Dunham,1962

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