- Award ID(s):
- 2015983
- PAR ID:
- 10333340
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Proceedings of the Online Symposium on Aeroelasticity, Fluid-Structure Interaction, and Vibrations
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
Nonlinear aeroelastic limit-cycle oscillations (LCOs) have become an area of interest due to both detrimental effects on flying vehicles and use in renewable energy harvesting. Initial studies on the interaction between aeroelastic systems and incoming flow disturbances have shown that disturbances can have significant effects on LCO amplitude, with some cases resulting in spontaneous annihilation of the LCO. This paper explores this interaction through wind-tunnel experiments using a variable-frequency disturbance generator to produce flow disturbances at frequencies near the inherent LCO frequency of an aeroelastic system with pitching and heaving degrees of freedom. The results show that incoming disturbances produced at frequencies approaching the LCO frequency from below produce a cyclic growth-decay in LCO amplitude that resembles interference between multiple sine waves with slightly varying frequencies. An aeroelastic inverse technique is applied to the results to study the transfer of energy between the pitching and heaving degrees of freedom as well as the aerodynamic power moving into and out of the system. Finally, the growth-decay cycles are shown to both excite LCOs in an initially stationary wing and annihilate preexisting LCOs in the same wing by appropriately timing the initiation and termination of disturbance generator motion.more » « less
-
The interaction between upstream flow disturbance generators and downstream aeroelastic structures has been the focus of several recent studies at North Carolina State University. Building on this work, which observed the modulation of limit cycle oscillations (LCOs) in the presence of vortex wakes, this study examines the design and validation of a novel disturbance generator consisting of an oscillating cylinder with an attached splitter plate. Analytical design of the bluff body was performed based on specific flow conditions which produced LCO annihilation in previous studies. Computational fluid dynamics simulations and experimental wind tunnel tests were used to validate the ability of the new disturbance generator to produce the desired wake region. Future work will see the implementation of this novel design in conjunction with aeroelastic structures in an effort to modulate and control LCOs, including the excitation and annihilation thereof.more » « less
-
null (Ed.)We present the dynamics of a hydrofoil free to oscillate in a plane as it interacts with vortices that are shed from a cylinder placed upstream. We consider cases where the cylinder is (i) fixed, (ii) forced to rotate constantly in one direction or (iii) forced to rotate periodically. When the upstream cylinder is fixed, at lower reduced velocities, the hydrofoil oscillates with a frequency equal to the frequency of vortices shed from the cylinder, and at higher reduced velocities with a frequency equal to half of the shedding frequency. When we force the cylinder to rotate in one direction, we control its wake and directly influence the response of the hydrofoil. When the rotation rate goes beyond a critical value, the vortex shedding in the cylinder's wake is suppressed and the hydrofoil is moved to one side and remains mainly static. When we force the cylinder to rotate periodically, we control the frequency of vortex shedding, which will be equal to the rotation frequency. Then at lower rotation frequencies, the hydrofoil interacts with one of the vortices in its oscillation path in the positive crossflow (transverse) direction, and with the second vortex in the negative crossflow direction, resulting in a 2:1 ratio between its inline and crossflow oscillations and a figure-eight trajectory. At higher rotation frequencies, the hydrofoil interacts with both shed vortices on its positive crossflow path and again in its negative crossflow path, resulting in a 1:1 ratio between its inline and crossflow oscillations and a linear trajectory.more » « less
-
This paper describes the numerical study of oscillating circular cylinders with rigid splitter plates of different lengths. These geometries may be used as disturbance generators for the study of unsteady airfoils and wings operating in highly vortical flowfields. It has been shown that cylinders undergoing forced rotational oscillations at their natural shedding frequency can produce wakes with minimal deviation in cycle-to-cycle vortex strength and position. Adding a splitter plate allows these deviations to be reduced even further. We present cases for oscillating cylinders having splitter-plate lengths up to [Formula: see text] at a Reynolds number of 7600. Frequencies are maintained at the natural shedding frequency, and a rotational amplitude of 45 deg is used. Numerical simulations are performed using a two-dimensional unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (RANS) code. Results are presented in the form of vorticity contours and cycle-averaged velocity profiles, as well as the dominant frequencies of cylinder lift force and downstream velocity angles. The results show that splitter-plate lengths shorter than [Formula: see text] adversely affect the ability to generate a coherent vortex wake due to shear layer roll-up near the trailing edge of the plate. Splitter plates longer than [Formula: see text] produced a reverse von Kármán wake with consistent cycle-to-cycle vortex shedding.
-
The interaction of flexible structures with viscoelastic flows can result in very rich dynamics. In this paper, we present the results of the interactions between the flow of a viscoelastic polymer solution and a cantilevered beam in a confined microfluidic geometry. Cantilevered beams with varying length and flexibility were studied. With increasing flow rate and Weissenberg number, the flow transitioned from a fore-aft symmetric flow to a stable detached vortex upstream of the beam, to a time-dependent unstable vortex shedding. The shedding of the unstable vortex upstream of the beam imposed a time-dependent drag force on the cantilevered beam resulting in flow-induced beam oscillations. The oscillations of the flexible beam were classified into two distinct regimes: a regime with a clear single vortex shedding from upstream of the beam resulting in a sinusoidal beam oscillation pattern with the frequency of oscillation increasing monotonically with Weissenberg number, and a regime at high Weissenberg numbers characterized by 3D viscoelastic instabilities where the frequency of oscillations plateaued. The critical onset of the flow transitions, the mechanism of vortex shedding and the dynamics of the cantilevered beam response are presented in detail here as a function of beam flexibility and flow viscoelasticity.more » « less