Hydrodynamic Damping of Beam Oscillations near a Surface

2021 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 657-671
Author(s):  
A. M. Kamalutdinov ◽  
A. N. Nuriev
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Bernd Nennemann ◽  
Christine Monette ◽  
Joël Chamberland-Lauzon

Author(s):  
E O Tengs ◽  
C W Bergan ◽  
K-R Jakobsen ◽  
P T Storli

Author(s):  
Yu Wang ◽  
Hamn-Ching Chen ◽  
Guilherme Vaz ◽  
Simon Burmester

Abstract The application of a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code to simulate the response of a semi-submersible floating wind turbine under pitch decay motion was investigated in this study. Estimation of the natural period, the hydrodynamic damping and the flow characteristics were the main focus of this study. An extensive verification study of the simulation results was conducted to improve the confidence and reliability of the numerical simulation by the estimation of the numerical errors and uncertainties. The time series of pitch motion was plotted against model test data. In addition, the pitch period and hydrodynamic damping were calculated and compared to experimental data. Detailed flow characteristics as vorticity field and hydrodynamic pressure field on the floater surface were illustrated after post processing of the computational data. The results of the flow characteristics suggest that the heave damping plates were a major contributor to the hydrodynamic damping of this floater in pitch decay.


Author(s):  
Djoni E. Sidarta ◽  
Kostas F. Lambrakos ◽  
Carl M. Larsen

A methodology for analyzing risers for in-line VIV fatigue damage has been developed that is based on the code SHEAR7, and laboratory in-line VIV coefficients. The in-line VIV fatigue in many instances governs the design of the riser since in-line VIV starts at a reduced velocity of about 1 whereas the threshold reduced velocity for cross flow VIV is about 4. The methodology can treat sheared currents on the basis of the cross flow VIV modeling in SHEAR7. Through the SHEAR7 modeling, the methodology removes conservatism implicit in the present ad hoc procedures for calculating riser in-line VIV response on the basis of the DNV-RP-F105 code. The reduction in conservatism is due to accounting properly for the power-in region in the VIV excitation, the hydrodynamic damping, and competing modal excitation (multiple mode response). The inline VIV coefficients have been derived from laboratory tests at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). The paper presents the in-line VIV coefficients, and examples to demonstrate the methodology for riser in sheared currents. The coefficients derived from the NTNU tests are functions of both the in-line VIV response amplitude and the reduced velocity. The coefficients presented in the paper are scaled test coefficients. The scaling of the NTNU coefficients assures that the methodology calculates in-line VIV amplitudes that are consistent with the response amplitudes in DNV-RP-F105 for the case of a simply supported riser in uniform current. This DNV code, although written for pipelines, has been extended to risers in sheared currents on the basis of conservative approaches.


2020 ◽  
pp. 107754632097691
Author(s):  
Junqiang Lou ◽  
Tehuan Chen ◽  
Yiling Yang ◽  
Chao Xu ◽  
Hairong Chen ◽  
...  

Dynamic oscillating behavior of the flexible structure immerged in viscous fluids has attracted growing attention and been widely used in various practical applications. A general electricity-structure-fluid coupled model for the forced dynamic responses of a cantilever immersed in fluids, with partially distributed macro fiber composite, is proposed in this paper. Based on the classical Euler–Bernoulli beam theory, the first mass-normalized mode shape of the cantilever with partially bonded macro fiber composite is determined using assumed mode method. The attachment of the macro fiber composite actuators stiffens the macro fiber composite-bonded portion of the cantilever. The established mode shape matches perfectly with experimental results. Considering the macro fiber composite actuator as a set of representative elements connected in parallel, the internally actuation moment provided by the macro fiber composite actuators is obtained. The hydrodynamic load caused by the surrounding fluids, decomposed into the added mass and hydrodynamic damping parts, is also added to the theoretical model in the frequency-domain form. The predicted in-air and underwater dynamic behaviors of the flexible beam are consistent with the experimental results at different auction levels. Thus, the obtained general electricity-structure-fluid coupled model can be used to predict the forced dynamic responses of flexible structure with partially bonded actuators immersed in fluids.


1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 377-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Per O. Yttervoll ◽  
Karl J. Eidsvik

1988 ◽  
Vol 189 ◽  
pp. 243-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Downie ◽  
P. W. Bearman ◽  
J. M. R. Graham

Hydrodynamic damping of floating bodies is due mainly to wave radiation and viscous damping. The latter is particularly important in controlling those responses of the body for which the wave damping is small. The roll response of ship hulls near resonance in beam seas is an example of this. The present paper applies a discrete vortex method as a local solution to model vortex shedding from the bilges of a barge hull of rectangular cross-section and hence provides an analytic method for predicting its coupled motions in three degrees of freedom, including the effects of the main component of viscous damping. The method provides a frequency-domain solution satisfying the full linearized boundary conditions on the free surface.


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