Manipulation of the Flow Around a Circular Cylinder by Utilizing the Flow Receptivity

Author(s):  
Yasuaki Kozato ◽  
Satoshi Kikuchi ◽  
Shigeki Imao

An attempt to control the flow around a circular cylinder by utilizing the receptivity to the external acoustic disturbance was carried out and its mechanism was also studied. The velocity fields around the cylinder vicinity are carefully investigated with an X-type hot-wire probe. When the disturbance of a higher frequency related to the separated shear layer instability is added, the development of turbulence and the spreading of the shear layer are restrained. And, the amplification of the fluctuating velocity component of the Karman vortex shedding is delayed and its degree is reduced. Furthermore, the process of the gradual scale modification of the shear layer instability that appears prior to the transition of the flow is suppressed.

2011 ◽  
Vol 133 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bishop ◽  
Serhiy Yarusevych

The effect of wall streamlining on flow development over a circular cylinder was investigated experimentally in an adaptive-wall wind tunnel. Experiments were carried out for a Reynolds number of 57,000 and three blockage ratios of 5%, 8%, and 17%. Three test section wall configurations were investigated, namely, geometrically straight walls (GSW), aerodynamically straight walls (ASW), and streamlined walls (SLW). The results show that solid blockage effects are evident in cylinder surface pressure distributions for the GSW and ASW configurations, manifested by an increased peak suction and base suction. Upon streamlining the walls, pressure distributions for each blockage ratio investigated closely match distributions expected for low blockage ratios. Wake blockage limits wake growth in the GSW configuration at 7.75 and 15 diameters downstream of the cylinder for blockages of 17% and 8%, respectively. This adverse effect can be rectified by streamlining the walls, with the resulting wake width development matching that expected for low blockage ratios. Wake vortex shedding frequency and shear layer instability frequency increase in the GSW and ASW configurations with increasing blockage ratio. The observed invariance of the near wake width with wall configuration suggests that the frequency increase is caused by the increased velocity due to solid blockage effects. For all the blockage ratios investigated, this increase is rectified in the SLW configuration, with the resulting Strouhal numbers of about 0.19 matching that expected for low blockage ratios at the corresponding Reynolds number. Blockage effects on the shear layer instability frequency are also successfully mitigated by streamlining the walls.


2004 ◽  
Vol 2004 (0) ◽  
pp. _721-1_-_721-5_
Author(s):  
Hiromitsu HAMAKAWA ◽  
Tohru FUKANO ◽  
Masaki ANDO ◽  
Eiichi NISHIDA

1988 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 491-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Unal ◽  
D. Rockwell

Vortex shedding from a circular cylinder is examined over a tenfold range of Reynolds number, 440 ≤ Re ≤ 5040. The shear layer separating from the cylinder shows, to varying degrees, an exponential variation of fluctuating kinetic energy with distance downstream of the cylinder. The characteristics of this unsteady shear layer are interpreted within the context of an absolute instability of the near wake. At the trailing-end of the cylinder, the fluctuation amplitude of the instability correlates well with previously measured values of mean base pressure. Moreover, this amplitude follows the visualized vortex formation length as Reynolds number varies. There is a drastic decrease in this near-wake fluctuation amplitude in the lower range of Reynolds number and a rapid increase at higher Reynolds number. These trends are addressed relative to the present, as well as previous, observations.


Author(s):  
Michael Bishop ◽  
Serhiy Yarusevych

The effect of wall streamlining on flow development over a circular cylinder was investigated experimentally in an adaptive-wall wind tunnel. Experiments were carried out for a Reynolds number of 57,000 and three blockage ratios of 5%, 8%, and 17%. Three test section wall configurations were investigated, namely, geometrically straight walls (GSW), aerodynamically straight walls (ASW), and streamlined walls (SLW). The results show that solid blockage effects are clearly evident in cylinder surface pressure distributions for the GSW and ASW configurations, manifested by an increased peak suction and base suction. Upon streamlining the walls, pressure distributions for each blockage ratio investigated closely match distributions expected for low blockage ratios. Wake blockage limits wake growth in the GSW configuration at 7.75 and 15 diameters downstream of the cylinder for blockages of 17% and 8%, respectively. This adverse effect can be rectified by streamlining the walls, with the resulting wake width development matching that expected for low blockage ratios. Wake vortex shedding frequency and shear layer instability frequency increase in the GSW and ASW configurations with increasing blockage ratio. The observed invariance of the near wake width with wall configuration suggests that the frequency increase is caused by the increased velocity due to solid blockage effects. For all the blockage ratios investigated, this increase is rectified in the SLW configuration, with the resulting Strouhal numbers of about 0.19 matching that expected for low blockage ratios at the corresponding Reynolds number. Blockage effects on the shear layer instability frequency are also successfully mitigated by streamlining the walls.


1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. E. Ramberg ◽  
O. M. Griffin

The von Karman vortex streets formed in the wakes of vibrating, flexible cables were studied using a hot-wire anemometer. All the experiments took place in the flow regime where the vibration and vortex-shedding frequencies lock together, or synchronize, to control the wake formation. Detailed measurements were made of the vortex formation flow for Reynolds numbers between 230 and 650. As in the case of vibrating cylinders, the formation-region length is dependent on a shedding parameter St* related to the natural Strouhal number and the vibrational conditions. Furthermore, the near wake configuration is found to be dependent on the local amplitude of vibration suggesting that the vibrating cylinder rseults are directly applicable in that region.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 (0) ◽  
pp. _814-1_-_814-4_
Author(s):  
Hiromitsu HAMAKAWA ◽  
Tomohiro KUDO ◽  
Eiichi NISHIDA ◽  
Tohru FUKANO

2018 ◽  
Vol 858 ◽  
pp. 714-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shirzad Hosseinverdi ◽  
Hermann F. Fasel

The role of free-stream turbulence (FST) in the hydrodynamic instability mechanisms and transition to turbulence in laminar separation bubbles (LSBs) was investigated using direct numerical simulations (DNS). Towards this end, a set of highly resolved DNS have been carried out, where isotropic FST fluctuations with intensities from 0.1 % to 3 % are introduced to investigate the relevant physical mechanisms governing the interaction of separation and transition in LSBs. For disturbance-free simulations, i.e. without FST, laminar–turbulent transition involves a Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) instability of the separated shear layer. For LSBs subjected to FST, vortical FST fluctuations penetrate the approaching attached laminar boundary layer upstream of the separation location and induce slowly growing low-frequency disturbances, so-called Klebanoff (K) modes, which cause a spanwise modulation with a distinct spanwise wavelength. Simultaneously, the FST enhances the initial levels of instability waves with frequencies in the frequency range of the KH instability, but at much smaller amplitude levels compared to the K-modes. Results from the calculations based on the linearized Navier–Stokes equations and comparison with DNS results reveal that the K-mode exhibits exponential growth in the separated shear layer until it reaches a peak amplitude. At the same time, two-dimensional (2D) disturbance waves are also exponentially amplified, in fact at larger growth rate compared to the K-mode, due to the primary (convective) shear-layer instability mechanism until they saturate downstream of the peak amplitude associated with the K-mode. Therefore, based on detailed spectral analysis and modal decompositions for the separation bubbles investigated, the transition process is the result of two different mechanisms: (i) strong amplification of high-frequency (order of the shedding frequency), essentially 2D or weakly oblique fluctuating disturbances and (ii) low-frequency, three-dimensional K-modes caused by FST. Depending on the intensity of the FST, one of these mechanisms would dominate the transition process, or both mechanisms act together and contribute simultaneously. The net effect of these two events is an acceleration of transition for an increased level of FST intensity, which in turn leads to a reduction of the extent of the separation bubble in streamwise and wall-normal directions. The ‘roll-up’ into spanwise large-scale vortical structures resulting from the shear-layer instability, and the eventual breakdown of these structures, strongly contribute to the reattachment process. The spanwise coherence of these ‘rollers’ deteriorates due to the presence of large-amplitude K-modes, thus effectively weakening their strength for high levels of FST intensities ($Tu>1\,\%$).


Author(s):  
Benjamin Bouscasse ◽  
Andrea Colagrossi ◽  
Salvatore Marrone ◽  
Antonio Souto-Iglesias

Flow past a circular cylinder close to a free surface at low Reynolds and large Froude numbers is investigated numerically using the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics model. This meshless method allows for a non-diffusive computation of the free surface evolution, even while breaking and fragmentation may occur. The distance of the cylinder to the free surface, submergence, is varied in order to investigate the detached flow patterns dependence with this factor. Vorticity shed by the cylinder, vortex generation due to free surface breaking, mixing processes, and drag and lift coefficients behavior are discussed. It has been found that, for small submergences, the classical Von Karman vortex shedding from the cylinder does not take place. In turn, moderate vortex shedding occurs, departing not from the cylinder but from vorticity generated at the free surface. This shedding takes places simultaneously with the transport of free surface fluid elements into the bulk of the fluid. It has been also found that for even smaller depth ratios, a vorticity layer remains spatially localized between the cylinder and the free surface, and a stagnation recirculating area develops behind the cylinder. Results are compared with literature finding reasonable qualitatively agreement with experimental works conducted with similar geometrical configuration but larger Reynolds number.


2009 ◽  
Vol 632 ◽  
pp. 245-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
SERHIY YARUSEVYCH ◽  
PIERRE E. SULLIVAN ◽  
JOHN G. KAWALL

Development of coherent structures in the separated shear layer and wake of an airfoil in low-Reynolds-number flows was studied experimentally for a range of airfoil chord Reynolds numbers, 55 × 103 ≤ Rec ≤ 210 × 103, and three angles of attack, α = 0°, 5° and 10°. To illustrate the effect of separated shear layer development on the characteristics of coherent structures, experiments were conducted for two flow regimes common to airfoil operation at low Reynolds numbers: (i) boundary layer separation without reattachment and (ii) separation bubble formation. The results demonstrate that roll-up vortices form in the separated shear layer due to the amplification of natural disturbances, and these structures play a key role in flow transition to turbulence. The final stage of transition in the separated shear layer, associated with the growth of a sub-harmonic component of fundamental disturbances, is linked to the merging of the roll-up vortices. Turbulent wake vortex shedding is shown to occur for both flow regimes investigated. Each of the two flow regimes produces distinctly different characteristics of the roll-up and wake vortices. The study focuses on frequency scaling of the investigated coherent structures and the effect of flow regime on the frequency scaling. Analysis of the results and available data from previous experiments shows that the fundamental frequency of the shear layer vortices exhibits a power law dependency on the Reynolds number for both flow regimes. In contrast, the wake vortex shedding frequency is shown to vary linearly with the Reynolds number. An alternative frequency scaling is proposed, which results in a good collapse of experimental data across the investigated range of Reynolds numbers.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document