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Award ID contains: 1659623

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  1. Flow-induced vibrations of flexible surfaces driven by coherent vortical structures are ubiquitous in engineering and biological flows; from the extraction of fluidic energy via oscillating electro-active polymers to vocal fold dynamics during voiced speech production. These scenarios may involve either discrete or periodic loading conditions due to the advection of vortices past the structure. This work considers, as a function of the vortex production frequency, the fluid-structure interaction that occurs as vortices are propagated tangentially over flexible plates with variable structural properties. Velocity fields are acquired with particle image velocimetry and used to compute the vorticity and pressure fields, while the plate energy is estimated from its kinematics. Primary and secondary peaks in plate deflection amplitude and the plate energy as a function of vortex production frequency are observed at integer fractions of the fundamental plate frequency. At resonance conditions, plate energy relative to discrete vortex loading is increased by approximately three orders of magnitude, while the sub-harmonics increase the plate energy by about two orders of magnitude. Additional physical influences on the energy exchange process, including vortex-to-plate spacing and Strouhal number, are also investigated, detailing the importance of spatial and temporal interactions. The magnitude of the initial plate deflection as the vortex ring approaches the plate, due to persistent vibrations from previous interactions, is shown to retard the time at which the maximum load is applied as the increased relative vortex-to-plate spacing weakens cross-sign vorticity interactions. Finally, plate properties are scaled to model the structural properties of the vocal folds and the effect of intra-glottal vortices on vocal fold dynamics is quantified, where a negligible influence is observed. 
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