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Low-Reynolds-number flow around an oscillating circular cylinder at low Keulegan–Carpenter numbers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 April 1998

H. DÜTSCH
Affiliation:
Institute of Fluid Mechanics, University of Erlangen–Nuremberg, Cauerstrasse 4, D–91058 Erlangen, Germany
F. DURST
Affiliation:
Institute of Fluid Mechanics, University of Erlangen–Nuremberg, Cauerstrasse 4, D–91058 Erlangen, Germany
S. BECKER
Affiliation:
Institute of Fluid Mechanics, University of Erlangen–Nuremberg, Cauerstrasse 4, D–91058 Erlangen, Germany
H. LIENHART
Affiliation:
Institute of Fluid Mechanics, University of Erlangen–Nuremberg, Cauerstrasse 4, D–91058 Erlangen, Germany
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Abstract

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Time-averaged LDA measurements and time-resolved numerical flow predictions were performed to investigate the laminar flow induced by the harmonic in-line oscillation of a circular cylinder in water at rest. The key parameters, Reynolds number Re and Keulegan–Carpenter number KC, were varied to study three parameter combinations in detail. Good agreement was observed for Re=100 and KC=5 between measurements and predictions comparing phase-averaged velocity vectors. For Re=200 and KC=10 weakly stable and non-periodic flow patterns occurred, which made repeatable time-averaged measurements impossible. Nevertheless, the experimentally visualized vortex dynamics was reproduced by the two-dimensional computations. For the third combination, Re=210 and KC=6, which refers to a totally different flow regime, the computations again resulted in the correct fluid behaviour. Applying the widely used model of Morison et al. (1950) to the computed in-line force history, the drag and the added-mass coefficients were calculated and compared for different grid levels and time steps. Using these to reproduce the force functions revealed deviations from those originally computed as already noted in previous studies. They were found to be much higher than the deviations for the coarsest computational grid or the largest time step. The comparison of several in-line force coefficients with results obtained experimentally by Kühtz (1996) for β=35 confirmed that force predictions could also be reliably obtained by the computations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press