Numerical Simulation of Vortex-Induced Vibration of Two Tandem Cylinders With Different Diameters Under Uniform Flow

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
xuepeng Fu ◽  
Yuwang Xu ◽  
Mengmeng Zhang ◽  
Haojie Ren ◽  
Shixiao Fu ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuepeng Fu ◽  
Yuwang Xu ◽  
Mengmeng Zhang ◽  
Haojie Ren ◽  
Bing Zhao ◽  
...  

Abstract Vortex-induced vibrations (VIV) of two elastically mounted circular cylinders with different diameters in tandem arrangement are investigated in a two-dimensional (2D) numerical simulation. The fluid domain is simulated by solving 2D Reynold-Averaged Navier-Stokes equations. Meanwhile, the VIV response of the structures is obtained by solving the motion equation using the 4th Runge-Kutta method. The parameters of the cylinders are designed according to an experimental study of flexible risers. Simulation of an elastically mounted single cylinder is firstly carried out and compared with published experimental results to verify the method utilized in the paper. The results of single cylinder show the response frequencies of the bluff cylinders and the flexible cylinder are comparable. In the simulation of the tandem cylinders, a “frequency capture” phenomenon that the oscillation frequencies of downstream cylinder are locked on to that of the up-stream one although they are with different diameters is observed. It also occurs in the experimental study of flexible cylinders. The mechanism behind is analyzed in the paper.


Author(s):  
Zhibiao Rao ◽  
J. Kim Vandiver ◽  
Vikas Jhingran

This paper addresses a practical problem: “Under which coverage of buoyancy modules, would the Vortex Induced Vibration (VIV) excitation on buoyant segments dominate the response?” This paper explores the excitation competition between bare and buoyant segments of a 38 meter long model riser. The source of data is a recent model test, conducted by SHELL Exploration and Production at the MARINTEK Ocean Basin in Trondheim Norway. A pipe model with five buoyancy configurations was tested. The results of these tests show that (1) the excitation on the bare and buoyant regions could be identified by frequency, because the bare and buoyant regions are associated with two different frequencies due to the different diameters; (2) a new phenomenon was observed; A third frequency in the spectrum is found not to be a multiple of the frequency associated with either bare or buoyancy regions, but the sum of the frequency associated with bare region and twice of the frequency associated with buoyancy region; (3) the contribution of the response at this third frequency to the total amplitude is small; (4) the power dissipated by damping at each excitation frequency is the metric used to determine the winner of excitation competition. For most buoyancy configurations, the excitation on buoyancy regions dominates the VIV response; (5) a formula is proposed to predict the winner of the excitation competition between bare and buoyant segments for a given buoyancy coverage.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mengmeng Zhang ◽  
Shixiao Fu ◽  
Zhiqi Zhang ◽  
Haojie Ren ◽  
Yuwang Xu

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