Three-dimensional wakes behind cylinders of square and circular cross-section: early and long-time dynamics

2019 ◽  
Vol 870 ◽  
pp. 419-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Agbaglah ◽  
C. Mavriplis

The flow in the near wake of a square cylinder at Reynolds numbers of 205 and 225, corresponding to three-dimensional wake instability modes $A$ and $B$, respectively, and that of the square’s circumscribed circular cylinder are examined by using three-dimensional Navier–Stokes numerical simulations. At small times, prior to the streamwise vortex shedding, a self-similar velocity is observed in the wake and no significant difference is observed in the dynamics of the flows past the square and the circular cylinders. The exponential growth of the three-dimensional instability reaches a saturation regime during this early time for the considered Reynolds numbers. Vortical structures in the wake at long times and shedding frequencies are very close for the square and the circular cylinders. The flow separation on the forward top and bottom corners of the square cylinder have the effect of increasing its effective width, making it comparable with the diameter of the circumscribed circular cylinder. Thus, Floquet multipliers and modes of the associated three-dimensional instabilities are shown to be very close for the two cylinders when using the circumscribed circular cylinder as the basis for a characteristic length scale. Most importantly, the wavenumber with the maximum growth rate, for modes $A$ and $B$, is approximately identical for the two cylinders.

Author(s):  
V. Tamimi ◽  
M. Zeinoddini ◽  
A. Bakhtiari ◽  
M. Golestani

In this paper results from simulating the vortex shedding phenomena behind a fixed tapered circular cylinder, at relatively high Reynolds numbers, are reported. Ansys-CFX computational fluid dynamics model, based on solving three-dimensional (3D) incompressible transient Navier Stokes equations, is employed for this purpose. The geometries applied in the models resemble those used in wind tunnel experiments by other researchers. The taper slope along the cylinder span is uniform with a tangent of 24:1. The diameter at mid-span of the cylinder equals to 0.0389 m. The Reynolds number (based on the mid-span diameter) is around 29,000. The computational model has first been calibrated against experiments for uniform 3D cylinders as well as results from a Direct Numerical Simulation of turbulent wake with vortex shedding past a uniform circular cylinder, as obtained by other researchers. The main flow characteristics for tapered cylinders such as vortex dislocations and splitting, cellular vortex shedding, oblique vortex shedding and the variation of the vorticity patterns along the tapered cylinder could be obtained from the simulations.


1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (3) ◽  
pp. 486-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Gu¨ven ◽  
V. C. Patel ◽  
C. Farell

A simple analytical model for two-dimensional mean flow at very large Reynolds numbers around a circular cylinder with distributed roughness is presented and the results of the theory are compared with experiment. The theory uses the wake-source potential-flow model of Parkinson and Jandali together with an extension to the case of rough-walled circular cylinders of the Stratford-Townsend theory for turbulent boundary-layer separation. In addition, a semi-empirical relation between the base-pressure coefficient and the location of separation is used. Calculation of the boundary-layer development, needed as part of the theory, is accomplished using an integral method, taking into account the influence of surface roughness on the laminar boundary layer and transition as well as on the turbulent boundary layer. Good agreement with experiment is shown by the results of the theory. The significant effects of surface roughness on the mean-pressure distribution on a circular cylinder at large Reynolds numbers and the physical mechanisms giving rise to these effects are demonstrated by the model.


2016 ◽  
Vol 790 ◽  
pp. 453-491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aswin Gnanaskandan ◽  
Krishnan Mahesh

A homogeneous mixture model is used to study cavitation over a circular cylinder at two different Reynolds numbers ($Re=200$ and 3900) and four different cavitation numbers (${\it\sigma}=2.0$, 1.0, 0.7 and 0.5). It is observed that the simulated cases fall into two different cavitation regimes: cyclic and transitional. Cavitation is seen to significantly influence the evolution of pressure, boundary layer and loads on the cylinder surface. The cavitated shear layer rolls up into vortices, which are then shed from the cylinder, similar to a single-phase flow. However, the Strouhal number corresponding to vortex shedding decreases as the flow cavitates, and vorticity dilatation is found to play an important role in this reduction. At lower cavitation numbers, the entire vapour cavity detaches from the cylinder, leaving the wake cavitation-free for a small period of time. This low-frequency cavity detachment is found to occur due to a propagating condensation front and is discussed in detail. The effect of initial void fraction is assessed. The speed of sound in the free stream is altered as a result and the associated changes in the wake characteristics are discussed in detail. Finally, a large-eddy simulation of cavitating flow at $Re=3900$ and ${\it\sigma}=1.0$ is studied and a higher mean cavity length is obtained when compared to the cavitating flow at $Re=200$ and ${\it\sigma}=1.0$. The wake characteristics are compared to the single-phase results at the same Reynolds number and it is observed that cavitation suppresses turbulence in the near wake and delays three-dimensional breakdown of the vortices.


2016 ◽  
Vol 798 ◽  
pp. 371-397 ◽  
Author(s):  
José P. Gallardo ◽  
Helge I. Andersson ◽  
Bjørnar Pettersen

We investigate the early development of instabilities in the oscillatory viscous flow past cylinders with elliptic cross-sections using three-dimensional direct numerical simulations. This is a classical hydrodynamic problem for circular cylinders, but other configurations have received only marginal attention. Computed results for some different aspect ratios ${\it\Lambda}$ from 1 : 1 to 1 : 3, all with the major axis of the ellipse aligned in the main flow direction, show good qualitative agreement with Hall’s stability theory (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 146, 1984, pp. 347–367), which predicts a cusp-shaped curve for the onset of the primary instability. The three-dimensional flow structures for aspect ratios larger than 2 : 3 resemble those of a circular cylinder, whereas the elliptical cross-section with the lowest aspect ratio of 1 : 3 exhibits oblate rather than tubular three-dimensional flow structures as well as a pair of counter-rotating spanwise vortices which emerges near the tips of the ellipse. Contrary to a circular cylinder, instabilities for an elliptic cylinder with sufficiently high eccentricity emerge from four rather than two different locations in accordance with the Hall theory.


AIAA Journal ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 49 (9) ◽  
pp. 1857-1870 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying-Ju Lin ◽  
Jiun-Jih Miau ◽  
Jung-Kuo Tu ◽  
Hsing-Wen Tsai

1961 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 244-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Gerrard

The oscillating lift and drag on circular cylinders are determined from measurements of the fluctuating pressure on the cylinder surface in the range of Reynolds number from 4 × 103 to just above 105.The magnitude of the r.m.s. lift coefficient has a maximum of about 0.8 at a Reynolds number of 7 × 104 and falls to about 0.01 at a Reynolds number of 4 × 103. The fluctuating component of the drag was determined for Reynolds numbers greater than 2 × 104 and was found to be an order of magnitude smaller than the lift.


Author(s):  
M Farhadi ◽  
M Rahnama

Large eddy simulation of flow over a square cylinder in a channel is performed at Reynolds numbers of 22 000 and 21 400. The selective structure function (SSF) modelling of the subgrid-scale stress terms is used and the convective terms are discretized using quadratic upstream interpolation for convective kinematics (QUICK) and central difference (CD) schemes. A series of time-averaged velocities, turbulent stresses, and some global flow parameters such as lift and drag coefficients and their fluctuations are computed and compared with experimental data. The suitability of SSF model has been shown by comparing the computed mean flow velocities and turbulent quantities with experiments. Results show negligible variation in the flow parameters for the two Reynolds numbers used in the present computations. It was observed that both QUICK and CD schemes are capable of obtaining results close to those of the experiments with some minor differences.


Author(s):  
A. Inasawa ◽  
K. Toda ◽  
M. Asai

Disturbance growth in the wake of a circular cylinder moving at a constant acceleration is examined experimentally. The cylinder is installed on a carriage moving in the still air. The results show that the critical Reynolds number for the onset of the global instability leading to a self-sustained wake oscillation increases with the magnitude of acceleration, while the Strouhal number of the growing disturbance at the critical Reynolds number is not strongly dependent on the magnitude of acceleration. It is also found that with increasing the acceleration, the Ka´rma´n vortex street remains two-dimensional even at the Reynolds numbers around 200 where the three-dimensional instability occurs to lead to the vortex dislocation in the case of cylinder moving at constant velocity or in the case of cylinder wake in the steady oncoming flow.


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