Semi-infinite vortex trails, and their relation to oscillating airfoils

1972 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 679-690 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Weihs

Semi-infinite double rows of vortices are used to study the periodic wake of both oscillating and stationary two-dimensional bodies immersed in a uniform incompressible stream. Analytical expressions for the induced Velocities on the body, for trails with constant spacing, which are valid for small values of the oscillation amplitude are presented while, for the general case of vortex shedding, an iterative procedure for the representation of trails of variable spacing is developed and used. Vortex streets due to oscillating bodies are obtained as a function of three non-dimensional parameters: the Strouhal number (initial spacing ratio), a non-dimensional vortex strength and the downstream spacing ratio. Criteria establishing when such trails are expected to widen, become narrow or stay of constant width are presented, as well as expressions for the induced velocities.The trails and their induced velocities enable the calculation of the vortex strength from measurable quantities. Thus they can serve as a method for estimating the hydrodynamic forces on the airfoil due to large amplitude oscillations, such as those observed in the propulsive movements of fish and cetaceans, as well as the small amplitude oscillations due to hydroelastic interactions.

2007 ◽  
Vol 129 (3) ◽  
pp. 517-527 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Wen ◽  
M. M. Khonsari

An analytical approach for treating problems involving oscillatory heat source is presented. The transient temperature profile involving circular, rectangular, and parabolic heat sources undergoing oscillatory motion on a semi-infinite body is determined by integrating the instantaneous solution for a point heat source throughout the area where the heat source acts with an assumption that the body takes all the heat. An efficient algorithm for solving the governing equations is developed. The results of a series simulations are presented, covering a wide range of operating parameters including a new dimensionless frequency ω¯=ωl2∕4α and the dimensionless oscillation amplitude A¯=A∕l, whose product can be interpreted as the Peclet number involving oscillatory heat source, Pe=ω¯A¯. Application of the present method to fretting contact is presented. The predicted temperature is in good agreement with published literature. Furthermore, analytical expressions for predicting the maximum surface temperature for different heat sources are provided by a surface-fitting method based on an extensive number of simulations.


1968 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 395-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. N. Ketola ◽  
J. M. McGrew

A theory of the partially wetted rotating disk is described and experimental data presented which verify the application of this theory in practical applications. Four different flow regimes may be identified according to the value of the disk Reynolds number and the spacing ratio between the disk and stationary wall. The analytical expressions for prediction of the pressure gradient developed and the frictional resistance are uniquely determined by the disk Reynolds number, spacing ratio, and the degree of wetting of the disk.


Author(s):  
Jiang Zhao ◽  
Qiang Tian ◽  
Haiyan Hu

Modal analysis of a rotating thin plate is made in this paper through the use of the thin plate elements described by the absolute nodal coordinate formulation (ANCF). The analytical expressions of elastic forces and their Jacobian matrices of the thin plate elements are derived and expressed in a computationally efficient way. The static analysis of a cantilever thin plate and the modal analysis of a square thin plate with completely free boundaries are made to validate the derived formulations. The modal analysis of a rotating cantilever thin plate based on the ANCF is studied. The effect of rotating angular velocity on the natural frequencies is investigated. The eigenvalue loci veering and crossing phenomena along with the corresponding modeshape variations are observed and carefully discussed. Finally, the effects of dimensional parameters on the dimensionless natural frequencies of the thin plate are studied.


1980 ◽  
Vol 24 (04) ◽  
pp. 256-270
Author(s):  
Touvia Miloh ◽  
Aharon Hauptman

A large-amplitude motion of a body of revolution in shallow water is analyzed by assuming the bottom to be even and the Froude number to be large enough for the velocity potential to vanish on the undisturbed free surface. First, the classical Kirchhoff-Lagrange equations of motion are extended to the case of time-dependent added-mass and inertia coefficients. The hydrodynamical force and moment acting on the body are expressed in terms of these coefficients together with their partial derivatives with respect to the generalized coordinates of the body. It is demonstrated how these expressions can be applied for the case of a prolate spheroid maneuvering in shallow water, where useful analytical expressions for the hydrodynamical coefficients are also obtained. By employing the concept of "equivalent spheroid" it is also shown that these results are universal in the sense that they may serve as useful approximations for arbitrary smooth bodies with axial symmetry. The hydrodynamical coefficients are given as a product of two terms, one which depends on the geometry of the body and the second on the relative position of the body with respect to the free surface. Both analytical and graphical solutions for these two functions are presented herein and it is also suggested how these can be used for a large-amplitude motion of nonspheroidal bodies of revolution.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 9-20
Author(s):  
V. Bulgakov ◽  
I. Golovach ◽  
V. Adamchuk

Aim. The elaboration of the theory of the impact of the vibrational digging-out working tool on the body of the beetroot, attached to the soil, and the substantiation of the rational kinematic and constructive parameters of the advanced vibrational digging-out working tool on the basis of the results obtained. Methods. The main provisions of advanced mathematics and theoretical mechanics were used, in particular, the general theory of mechanical impact and the oscillation theory. The equation systems obtained were solved using PC and the elaborated programme. Results. The main provisions of the theory of the impact of the digging-out working tool on the beetroot while extracting the latter from the soil were elaborated. The mathematical model of the impact interaction of the digging-out working tool and the body of the beetroot, attached to the soil, during the vibrational digging-out of sugar beets was created. The equations, describing the mentioned process, were used as a basis for the impact impulse and the impact force; the conditions of not damaging the beetroot during the impact were established. The analytic expression for the determination of the allowed frequency of vibra- tions of the working vibrational digging-out tool with the consideration of its constructive parameters and the translational motion was obtained. The estimates, obtained using PC calculations, allow designing advanced working vibrational digging-out tools to harvest sugar beets, taking the condition of avoiding damage to the root into account. Conclusions. The analytic expression for the determination of the allowed frequency of vibrations of the vibrational digging-out working tool, taking into account its constructive parameters and the translational motion, was obtained taking the condition of avoiding damage to the root into consideration. The algorithm and the PC analysis programme for the allowed frequency of oscillations of the vibrational digging- out working tool with the consideration of no damage to the beetroot during the impact interaction were elabo- rated. Numerous PC estimates demonstrated that on condition of the mentioned weight of the working tool of m = 1.0 kg the allowed frequency, at which there is no damage to the beetroot, should not exceed v = 10.0 hertz (with the oscillation amplitude of a = 0.015 m and the maximum depth of the digging-out working tool in the soil of h = 0.1 m). Here the translational motion should be in the range of 1.3 ... 2.2 m/s. The obtained results of the theoretical research allow designing advanced vibrational digging-out working tools to harvest sugar beets without damaging them.


1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 531-537 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Nakayama ◽  
V. C. Patel ◽  
L. Landweber

An iterative procedure for the calculation of the thick attached turbulent boundary layer near the tail of a body of revolution is presented. The procedure consists of the potential-flow calculation by a method of integral equation of the first kind and the calculation of the development of the boundary layer and the wake using an integral method with the condition that the velocity remains continuous across the edge of the boundary layer and the wake. The additional terms that appear in the momentum integral equation for the thick boundary layer and the near wake are taken into account and the pressure difference between the body surface and the edge of the boundary layer and the wake can be determined. The results obtained by the present method are in good agreement with the experimental data. Part 1 of this paper deals with the potential flow, while Part 2 [1] describes the boundary layer and wake calculations, and the overall iterative procedure and results.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 223-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Yao-Tsu Wu ◽  
Arthur K. Whitney ◽  
Christopher Brennen

This paper is intended to evaluate the wall effects in the pure-drag case of plane cavity flow past an arbitrary body held in a closed tunnel, and to establish an accurate correction rule. The three theoretical models in common use, namely, the open-wake, Riabouchinsky and re-entrant-jet models, are employed to provide solutions in the form of some functional equations. From these theoretical solutions several different rules for the correction of wall effects are derived for symmetric wedges. These simple correction rules are found to be accurate, as compared with their corresponding exact numerical solutions, for all wedge angles and for small to moderate ‘tunnel-spacing ratio’ (the ratio of body frontal width to tunnel spacing). According to these correction rules, conversion of a drag coefficient, measured experimentally in a closed tunnel, to the corresponding unbounded flow case requires only the data of the conventional cavitation number and the tunnel-spacing ratio if based on the open-wake model, though using the Riabouchinsky model it requires an additional measurement of the minimum pressure along the tunnel wall.The numerical results for symmetric wedges show that the wall effects in-variably result in a lower drag coefficient than in an unbounded flow at the same cavitation number, and that this percentage drag reduction increases with decreasing wedge angle and/or with decreasing tunnel spacing relative to the body frontal width. This indicates that the wall effects axe generally more significant for thinner bodies in cavity flows, and they become exceedingly small for sufficiently blunt bodies. Physical explanations for these remarkable features of cavity-flow wall effects are sought; they are supported by the present experimental investigation of the pressure distribution on the wetted body surface as the flow parameters are varied. It is also found that the theoretical drag coefficient based on the Riabouchinsky model is smaller than that predicted by the open-wake model, all the flow parameters being equal, except when the flow approaches the choked state (with the cavity becoming infinitely long in a closed tunnel), which is the limiting case common to all theoretical models. This difference between the two flow models becomes especially pronounced for smaller wedge angles, shorter cavities, and with tunnel walls farther apart.In order to gauge the degree of accuracy of these theoretical models in approximating the real flows, and t o ascertain the validity of the correction rules, a series of definitive experiments was carefully designed to complement the theory, and then carried out in a high-speed water tunnel. The measurements on a series of fully cavitating wedges at zero incidence suggest that, of the theoretical models, that due to Riabouchinsky is superior throughout the range tested. The accuracy of the correction rule based on that model has also been firmly established. Although the experimental investigation has been limited to symmetric wedges only, this correction rule (equations (85), (86) of the text) is expected to possess a general validity, at least for symmetric bodies without too large curvatures, since the geometry of the body profile is only implicitly involved in the correction formula. This experimental study is perhaps one of a very few with the particular objective of scrutinizing various theoretical cavity-flow models.


2008 ◽  
Vol 86 (9) ◽  
pp. 1039-1056 ◽  
Author(s):  
E I Saad

This paper investigates first the Stokes’ axisymmetrical translational motion of a spheroid particle, whose shape differs slightly from that of a sphere, in an unbounded micropolar fluid. A linear slip, Basset-type, boundary condition has been used. The drag acting on the spheroid is evaluated and discussed for the various parameters of the problem. Also, the terminal velocity is evaluated and tabulated for the slip, deformity, and micropolarity parameters. Secondly, the motion of a spheroidal particle at the instant it passes the centre of a spherical envelope filled with a micropolar fluid is investigated using the slip condition at the surface of the particle. The analytical expressions for the stream function and microrotation component are obtained to first order in the small parameter characterizing the deformation. As an application, we consider an oblate spheroidal particle and the drag acting on the body is evaluated. Its variation with respect to the diameter ratio, deformity, micropolarity, and slip parameters is tabulated and displayed graphically. Well-known cases are deduced, the wall effect is then examined and comparisons are attempted between the classical fluid and micropolar fluid.PACS Nos.: 47.45.Gx, 47.15.Gf, 47.50.–d


1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 461-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Rodkiewicz ◽  
P. Yang

The characteristics of the infinitely wide tilting pad bearings operating under thermal elastohydrodynamic lubrication (TEHL) condition were investigated theoretically. The power-law rheological model was chosen to describe the non-Newtonian flow of the lubricant. An iterative procedure was developed to determine the shear stresses as well as the equivalent viscosity within the oil film. The analysis considers, simultaneously or individually, the following affecting factors: generation and transfer of heat, elastic and thermo-elastic deformations of bearing components due to pressure and temperature, and the inlet pressure build-up. The results were presented and discussed in terms of the applicable non-dimensional parameters.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (24) ◽  
pp. 8496
Author(s):  
Ussama Ali ◽  
Md. Islam ◽  
Isam Janajreh ◽  
Yap Fatt ◽  
Md. Mahbub Alam

This study is an effort to encapsulate the fundamentals and major findings in the area of fluid-solid interaction, particularly the flow-induced vibrations (FIV). Periodic flow separation and vortex shedding stretching downstream induce dynamic fluid forces on the bluff body and results in oscillatory motion of the body. The motion is generally referred to as flow-induced vibrations. FIV is a dynamic phenomenon as the motion, or the vibration of the body is subjected to the continuously changing fluid forces. Sometimes FIV is modeled as forced vibrations to mimic the vibration response due to the fluid forces. FIV is a deep concern of engineers for the design of modern heat exchangers, particularly the shell-and-tube type, as it is the major cause for the tube failures. Effect of important parameters such as Reynolds number, spacing ratio, damping coefficient, mass ratio and reduced velocity on the vibration characteristics (such as Strouhal number, vortex shedding, vibration frequency and amplitude, etc.) is summarized. Flow over a bluff body with wakes developed has been studied widely in the past decades. Several review articles are available in the literature on the area of vortex shedding and FIV. None of them, however, discusses the cases of FIV with heat transfer. In particular systems, FIV is often coupled to heat transfer, e.g., in nuclear power plants, FIV causes wear and tear to heat exchangers, which can eventually lead to catastrophic failure. As the circular shape is the most common shape for tubes and pipes encountered in practice, this review will only focus on the FIV of circular cylinders. In this attempt, FIV of single and multiple cylinders in staggered arrangement, including tandem and side-by-side arrangement is summarized for heated and unheated cylinder(s) in the one- and two-degree of freedom. The review also synthesizes the effect of fouling on heat transfer and flow characteristics. Finally, research prospects for heated circular cylinders are also stated.


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