scholarly journals Detailed force modelling of the secondary load cycle

2020 ◽  
Vol 889 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amin Ghadirian ◽  
Henrik Bredmose

2019 ◽  
Vol 91 ◽  
pp. 101872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuang Chang ◽  
Weiping Huang ◽  
Hongyuan Sun ◽  
Lei Li

Author(s):  
John Grue ◽  
Morten Huseby

Experimental observations of a secondary load cycle in the force acting on a vertical cylinder exposed to long and steep waves are discussed. A complementary discussion of the occurrence of ringing of models of offshore structures is given. The height of the secondary load cycle is typically up to about 0.1–0.15 times the peak to peak force on the cylinder. The load cycle is observed for a nondimensional wavenumber kR in the range 0.1–0.33 and for a Froude number Fr = ωζm/gD exceeding about 0.4. Pronounced ringing occurs for the same parameter range. (k the wavenumber, R the cylinder radius, ω the wave frequency, ζm the maximal wave elevation, g the acceleration of gravity, D = 2R.)


2014 ◽  
Vol 755 ◽  
pp. 1-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo T. Paulsen ◽  
H. Bredmose ◽  
H. B. Bingham ◽  
N. G. Jacobsen

AbstractForcing by steep regular water waves on a vertical circular cylinder at finite depth was investigated numerically by solving the two-phase incompressible Navier–Stokes equations. Consistently with potential flow theory, boundary layer effects were neglected at the sea bed and at the cylinder surface, but the strong nonlinear motion of the free surface was included. The numerical model was verified and validated by grid convergence and by comparison to relevant experimental measurements. First-order convergence towards an analytical solution was demonstrated and an excellent agreement with the experimental data was found. Time-domain computations of the normalized inline force history on the cylinder were analysed as a function of dimensionless wave height, water depth and wavelength. Here the dependence on depth was weak, while an increase in wavelength or wave height both lead to the formation of secondary load cycles. Special attention was paid to this secondary load cycle and the flow features that cause it. By visual observation and a simplified analytical model it was shown that the secondary load cycle was caused by the strong nonlinear motion of the free surface which drives a return flow at the back of the cylinder following the passage of the wave crest. The numerical computations were further analysed in the frequency domain. For a representative example, the secondary load cycle was found to be associated with frequencies above the fifth- and sixth-harmonic force component. For the third-harmonic force, a good agreement with the perturbation theories of Faltinsen, Newman & Vinje (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 289, 1995, pp. 179–198) and Malenica & Molin (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 302, 1995, pp. 203–229) was found. It was shown that the third-harmonic forces were estimated well by a Morison force formulation in deep water but start to deviate at decreasing depth.


2018 ◽  
Vol 849 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bjørn Hervold Riise ◽  
John Grue ◽  
Atle Jensen ◽  
Thomas B. Johannessen

Laboratory experiments with a bottom hinged surface-piercing cylinder, exposed to irregular deep water waves, are used to investigate high-frequency forcing. The focus is on the secondary load cycle, a strongly nonlinear phenomenon regarding the wave load on a vertical cylinder, first identified by Grue et al. (1993 Preprint Series. Mechanics and Applied Mathematics, pp. 1–30. University of Oslo, available at http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-52740; 1994 Ninth International Workshop on Water Waves and Floating Bodies (ed. M. Ohkusu), pp. 77–81, available at http://iwwwfb.org). For a total of 2166 single wave events, the force above $3\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}$ (where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}$ is the governing wave frequency) is used to identify and split the strongly nonlinear forces into two peaks: a high-frequency peak closely correlated in time with the wave crest when the total load is positive and a high-frequency peak defining the secondary load cycle which occurs close in time to the wave zero downcrossing when the total load is negative. The two peaks are studied by regression analysis as a function of either the Keulegan–Carpenter number ($KC$) or the Froude number ($Fr$). Regarding the secondary load cycle, the best correlation is found with $Fr$. The speed of the travelling edge of the undisturbed wave approximates the fluid velocity. A threshold value separating between small and large forces is found for $KC\sim 4$–5, indicating effects of flow separation. Alternatively, the threshold occurs for $Fr\sim 0.3$–0.4, indicating local wave effects at the scale of the cylinder diameter. The findings suggest that both effects are present and important.


Fatigue tests have been made on longitudinal non-load-carrying fillet welded joints using simple loading sequences in which each constant amplitude load cycle had secondary load cycles of one or two magnitudes appended to it. The tests have involved both as-welded and stress relieved specimens, and have been made under both tensile and alternating loading. In some instances, particularly under tensile loading, it was expected that stress interaction would occur so as to give values of Ʃ n / N > 1. However, Ʃ n / N was, in almost every case, less than 1.0 (i. e. Miner’s rule was unsafe). Based upon an empirical fit of an equation to one of the early sets of results, it proved possible to predict the remainder of the results with reasonable accuracy, and it has been shown that this approach can be formalized into a rule that would be relatively easy to apply in practice (equation (21)).


Author(s):  
Carolyn Nohr ◽  
Ann Ayres

Texts on electron diffraction recommend that the camera constant of the electron microscope be determine d by calibration with a standard crystalline specimen, using the equation


Author(s):  
Kin Lam

The energy of moving ions in solid is dependent on the electronic density as well as the atomic structural properties of the target material. These factors contribute to the observable effects in polycrystalline material using the scanning ion microscope. Here we outline a method to investigate the dependence of low velocity proton stopping on interatomic distances and orientations.The interaction of charged particles with atoms in the frame work of the Fermi gas model was proposed by Lindhard. For a system of atoms, the electronic Lindhard stopping power can be generalized to the formwhere the stopping power function is defined as


Author(s):  
A. Kosiara ◽  
J. W. Wiggins ◽  
M. Beer

A magnetic spectrometer to be attached to the Johns Hopkins S. T. E. M. is under construction. Its main purpose will be to investigate electron interactions with biological molecules in the energy range of 40 KeV to 100 KeV. The spectrometer is of the type described by Kerwin and by Crewe Its magnetic pole boundary is given by the equationwhere R is the electron curvature radius. In our case, R = 15 cm. The electron beam will be deflected by an angle of 90°. The distance between the electron source and the pole boundary will be 30 cm. A linear fringe field will be generated by a quadrupole field arrangement. This is accomplished by a grounded mirror plate and a 45° taper of the magnetic pole.


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