Vortex-induced rotations of two side-by-side square cylinders in a two-dimensional microchannel

2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (11) ◽  
pp. 117104
Author(s):  
Lichun Li ◽  
Zhe Yan ◽  
Zhenhai Pan
Author(s):  
Lichun Li ◽  
Shanshan Li ◽  
Zhe Yan ◽  
Zhenhai Pan

Abstract This paper investigates the dynamic response of two freely rotatable rigid square cylinders to two-dimensional laminar flow in a microchannel. The square cylinders are laterally pinned side-by-side in the microchannel with a single freedom of rotation. Finite volume method coupled with a dynamic mesh technique is developed and validated to reveal the detailed motion characteristics of the cylinders and nearby flow structures. Under small Reynolds number (Re = 50), both cylinders oscillate periodically. The oscillate curves (rotating angle v.s. time) are symmetrical with each other but with a certain phase difference. At Re = 150, both cylinders oscillate randomly. Under high Reynolds number (Re = 300), the two cylinders both keep rotating in the opposite direction with the velocity magnitude fluctuating drastically around 1.75. Important motion details are presented to understand the Fluid-Structure interaction mechanism under different Reynolds number, including the time history of rotating angles and rotating velocities, lift and drag coefficients on the cylinders, distribution of pressure around the cylinder sides. Both pressure-induced torque and the shear induced one are obtained and their contributions to both cylinders’ rotation characteristics are quantitatively evaluated. Vortex structures and streamlines around the cylinders at specific moments are also revealed in this paper to help understanding the fluid-structure interaction phenomenon.


1979 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald Schubert ◽  
Joe M. Straus

In an effort to determine the characteristics of the various types of convection that can occur in a fluid-saturated porous medium heated from below, a Galerkin approach is used to investigate three-dimensional convection in a cube and two-dimensional convection in a square cross-section. Strictly two-dimensional, single-cell flow in a square cross-section is steady for Rayleigh numbers R between 4π2 and a critical value which lies between 300 and 320; it is unsteady at higher values of R. Double-cell, two-dimensional flow in a square cross-section becomes unsteady when R exceeds a value between 650 and 700, and triple-cell motion is unsteady for R larger than a value between 800 and 1000. Considerable caution must be exercised in attributing physical reality to these flows. Strictly two-dimensional, steady, multicellular convection may not be realizable in a three-dimensional geometry because of instability to perturbations in the orthogonal dimension. For example, even though single-cell, two-dimensional convection in a square cross-section is steady at R = 200, it cannot exist in either an infinitely long square cylinder or in a cube. It could exist, however, in a cylinder whose length is smaller than 0.38 times the dimension of its square cross-section. Three-dimensional convection in a cube becomes unsteady when R exceeds a value between 300 and 320, similar to the unicellular two-dimensional flow in a square cross-section. Nusselt numbers Nu, generally accurate to 1%, are given for the strictly two-dimensional flows up to R = 1000 and for three-dimensional convection in cubes up to R = 500. Single-cell, two-dimensional, steady convection in a square cross-section transports the most heat for R < 97; this mode of convection is also stable in square cylinders of arbitrary length including the cube for R < 97. Steady three-dimensional convection in cubes transports more heat for 97 [lsim ] R [lsim ] 300 than do any of the realizable two-dimensional modes. At R [gsim ] 300 the unsteady modes of convection in both square cylinders and cubes involve wide variations in Nu.


2014 ◽  
Vol 670-671 ◽  
pp. 109-112
Author(s):  
Guo Hua Wen ◽  
Zheng Biao Ouyang

A new type of two-dimensional square-lattice photonic crystal structure made of rotated square cylinders and cross thin plates is presented and numerically investigated using the plane-wave expansion method. The largest absolute photonic bandgap (APBG) reaches 14.3%. The proposed structure can have promising application for its large APBG and convenience in designing optical circuits.


2011 ◽  
Vol 110-116 ◽  
pp. 2896-2902
Author(s):  
Amin Etminan ◽  
Abazar Barzegar

In this paper, the flow characteristics and heat transfer over two equal square cylinders which are placed in tandem arrangement, are investigated numerically. The simulations are performed for a Reynolds number range varying from 1 to 200 and spacing between the cylinders is five widths of the cylinders. The calculations are carried out on a finite volume code for both steady and unsteady incompressible laminar flow in the two dimensional regime. In this study, the instantaneous and mean streamlines and isotherm patterns for different Reynolds numbers are presented. In addition, the effect of Reynolds number on the flow patterns around the cylinders are in detail presented. In addition, the quantities such as pressure and viscous drag coefficients and pressure coefficients are presented.


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