scholarly journals Numerical study on the characteristics of vortex-induced vibrations of a small-scale subsea jumper using a wake oscillator model

2022 ◽  
Vol 243 ◽  
pp. 110028
Author(s):  
Yang Qu ◽  
Shixiao Fu ◽  
Zhenhui Liu ◽  
Yuwang Xu ◽  
Jiayang Sun
2021 ◽  
Vol 80 ◽  
pp. 103078
Author(s):  
Yun Gao ◽  
Zhuangzhuang Zhang ◽  
Ganghui Pan ◽  
Geng Peng ◽  
Lei Liu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yahya Modarres-Sadeghi ◽  
Franz S. Hover ◽  
Michael S. Triantafyllou

Vortex induced vibrations of long distributed structures (risers and mooring cables) is an inherently complicated phenomenon in which due to the riser multi-mode excitations, various combinations of traveling and standing wave patterns along the length is observed. These observations are made based on a series of model scale experiments conducted on a riser for both uniform and linearly sheared flow cases. In these model scale experiments, strain and acceleration measurements are conducted at selected points along the riser. The contour plots of amplitudes of oscillations in these experiments show a mainly traveling wave behavior for linearly sheared flow cases and a mainly standing wave one for the uniform flow cases. In order to model the vortex induced vibrations of the riser used in these experiments, a wake oscillator model is used. In this model, the riser is assumed to be a tensioned string and the wake dynamics is represented by a Van der Pol oscillator whose driving force is in parallel with the riser acceleration. Randomness in the current, added mass and lift coefficients is taken into account by considering random parameters for the wake oscillator model. By using the proper parameters in this wake oscillator model, its results can be compared with the experimental ones. The comparison is made in terms of dynamical behavior (traveling waves versus standing waves, amplitudes and frequencies of oscillations) as well as the fatigue life calculations. The statistics of fatigue life calculations based on the experimental reconstruction compares well with those of the model results showing that the theoretical model can predict fatigue damage of the riser fairly well.


Author(s):  
Clément Grouthier ◽  
Sébastien Michelin ◽  
Yahya Modarres-Sadeghi ◽  
Emmanuel de Langre

Many technologies based on fluid-structure interaction mechanisms are being developed to harvest energy from geo-physical flows. The velocity of such flows is low, and so is their energy density. Large systems are therefore required to extract a significant amount of energy. The question of the efficiency of energy harvesting using VIV of cables is addressed in this paper, through the case of a hanging cable with a harvester at its upper extremity. An experimental analysis of the vortex-induced vibrations of a hanging cable with variable tension along its length is first presented. It is shown that standing waves develop and that the extracted mode shapes are self-similar. This self-similar behaviour of the spatial distribution of the vibrations along the hanging string is explained theoretically by performing a linear stability analysis of an adapted wake-oscillator model. The hanging cable is then combined with a localized harvester and its dynamics is measured. An appropriate reduced-order wake-oscillator model is also used to perform parametric studies of the impact of the harvesting parameters on the efficiency. An optimal set of parameters is identified and it is shown that the maximum efficiency is close to the value reached with an elastically-mounted rigid cylinder. The efficiency is found to be essentially driven by the occurrence of traveling wave vibrations.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 3116-3128 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.N.W. Hussin ◽  
◽  
F.N. Harun ◽  
M.H. Mohd ◽  
M.A.A. Rahman ◽  
...  

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