1 / 29

Basic bluff-body aerodynamics II

Basic bluff-body aerodynamics II. Wind loading and structural response Lecture 9 Dr. J.D. Holmes. -0.20. -0.10. -0.20. x. x. x. leeward wall. roof. -0 . 23. -0.18. -0.23. x. x. x. -0.20. -0.20. x. x. -0.2. side wall. -0.5. -0.5. Sym.about C L. -0.7. -0.8. -0.8.

libitha
Télécharger la présentation

Basic bluff-body aerodynamics II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics II Wind loading and structural response Lecture 9 Dr. J.D. Holmes

  2. -0.20 -0.10 -0.20 x x x leeward wall roof -0.23 -0.18 -0.23 x x x -0.20 -0.20 x x -0.2 side wall -0.5 -0.5 Sym.about CL -0.7 -0.8 -0.8 -0.6 -0.8 windward wall 0.7 0.5 0.0 Wind Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Pressures on prisms in turbulent boundary layer : • drag coefficient (based on Uh )  0.8

  3. x-0.6 Roof -0.5 -0.6 x-0.6 0.9 x -0.56 to –0.59 -0.4 to –0.49 -0.6 x x Wind -0.5 Leeward wall x -0.6 Windward wall Side wall -0.6 Wind -0.5 -0.5 0.5 x -0.6 -0.7 x 0.4 0.3 x Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Pressures on prisms in turbulent boundary layer : shows effect of velocity profile nearly uniform

  4. Laminar boundary layer Separation Sub-critical Re < 2  105 Cd = 1.2 Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Circular cylinders : Complexity due to interacting effects of surface roughness, Reynolds Number and turbulence in the approach flow Flow regimes in smooth flow : Subcritical regime : most wind-tunnel tests - separation at about 90o from the windward generator

  5. Turbulent Laminar Separation Super-critical Re  5  105 Cd 0.4 Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Circular cylinders : Complexity due to interacting effects of surface roughness, Reynolds Number and turbulence in the approach flow Flow regimes in smooth flow : Supercritical : flow in boundary layer becomes turbulent - separation at 140o - minimum drag coefficient

  6. Separation Turbulent Post-critical Re  107 Cd  0.7 Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Circular cylinders : Complexity due to interacting effects of surface roughness, Reynolds Number and turbulence in the approach flow Flow regimes in smooth flow : Post-critical : flow in boundary layer is turbulent - separation at about 120o

  7. 1.0 0.5 0 -0.5 -1.0 -1.5 -2.0 -2.5 q q degrees 20 60 100 140 Cp U Drag coefficient mainly determined by pressure on leeward side (wake) Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Circular cylinders : Pressure distributions at sub-critical and super-critical Reynolds Numbers

  8. increasing surface roughness 1.2 0.8 0.4 k/b = 0.02 k/b = 0.007 Cd k/b = 0.002 104 2 4 8 105 2 4 8 106 2 4 8 107 Re U b Sanded surface Smooth surface Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Circular cylinders : Effect of surface roughness : Increasing surface roughness : decreases critical Re - increases minimum Cd

  9. b Cp h Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Circular cylinders : Effect of aspect ratio on mean pressure distribution : Silos, tanks in atmospheric boundary layer Decreasing h/b : increases minimum Cp (less negative)

  10. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Fluctuating forces and pressures on bluff bodies : Sources of fluctuating pressures and forces : • Freestream turbulence (buffeting) • - associated with flow fluctuations in the approach flow • Vortex-shedding (wake-induced) • - unsteady flow generated by the bluff body itself • Aeroelastic forces • - forces due to the movement of the body (e.g. aerodynamic damping)

  11. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Buffeting - the Quasi-steady assumption : Fluctuating pressure on the body is assumed to follow the variations in wind velocity in the approach flow : p(t) = Cpo (1/2) a [U(t)]2 Cpo is a quasi-steady pressure coefficient Expanding : p(t) = Cpo (1/2) a [U + u(t) ]2 = Cpo (1/2) a [U2 + 2U u(t) + u(t)2 ] Taking mean values : p = Cpo (1/2) a [U2 + u2]

  12. Squaring and taking mean values : Cp2 (1/4) a2 [4U2]= Cp2a2U2 u2 Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Buffeting - the Quasi-steady assumption : Small turbulence intensities : (e.g. for Iu = 0.15, u2 = 0.0225U2 ) p  Cpo (1/2) aU2 =Cp (1/2) aU2 i.e. Cpo is approximately equal to Cp Fluctuating component : p' (t) = Cpo (1/2) a [2U u'(t) + u'(t)2 ]

  13. p(t) Time Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Peak pressures by the Quasi-steady assumption : Quasi-steady assumption gives predictions of either maximum or minimum pressure, depending on sign of Cp

  14. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Vortex shedding : On a long (two-dimensional) bluff body, the rolling up of separating shear layers generates vortices on each side alternately • Occurs in smooth or turbulent approach flow • may be enhanced by vibration of the body (‘lock-in’) • cross-wind force produced as each vortex is shed

  15. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Vortex shedding : Strouhal Number - non dimensional vortex shedding frequency, ns : • b = cross-wind dimension of body • St varies with shape of cross section • circular cylinder : varies with Reynolds Number

  16. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Vortex shedding - circular cylinder : • vortex shedding not regular in the super-critical Reynolds Number range

  17. 0.12 2.5b 0.06 2b 0.14 ~10b 0.08 Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Vortex shedding - other cross-sections :

  18. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • fluctuating pressure coefficient : • fluctuating sectional force coefficient : • fluctuating (total) force coefficient :

  19. 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Fluctuating side force coefficient Cl 105 106 107 Reynolds number, Re Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • fluctuating cross-wind sectional force coefficient for circular cylinder : dependecy on Reynolds Number

  20. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Quasi-steadyfluctuating pressure coefficient : • Quasi-steady drag coefficient :

  21. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Correlation coefficient for fluctuating forces on a two-dimensional body : • Correlation length : y is separation distance between sections

  22. 6 4 2 0 Correlation length / diameter 104 105 106 Reynoldsnumber, Re Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Correlation length for a stationary circular cylinder (smooth flow) : cross-wind vibration at same frequency as vortex shedding increases correlation length

  23. L Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Total fluctuating force on a slender body : We require the total mean and fluctuating forces on the whole body

  24. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Total fluctuating force on a slender body : mean total force : F = fiyi instantaneous total fluctuating force : F(t) =  fi (t) yi = f1(t) y1 + f2(t) y2 + ……………….fN(t) yN • Squaring both sides : [F(t)]2 = [ f1(t) y1 + f2(t) y2 + ……………….fN(t) yN]2 • = [f1(t) y1]2 + [f2(t) y2]2 ..+ [fN(t) yN]2 + f1(t) f2(t) y1y2 + f1(t) f3(t) y1y3 +...

  25. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Total fluctuating force on a slender body : Taking mean values : As yi, yj tend to zero : writing the integrand (covariance) as : This relates the total mean square fluctuating force to the sectional force

  26. Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Total fluctuating force on a slender body : Introduce a new variable (yi - yj) : Special case (1) - full correlation,(yi-yj) = 1 : fluctuating forces treated like static forces Special case (2) - low correlation,correlation length l is much less than L : mean square fluctuating force is proportional to the correlation length - applicable to slender towers

  27. The double integral : is represented by the volume under the graph : yj yi Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Total fluctuating force on a slender body : Symmetric about diagonal since (yj-yi) =(yi-yj ). Along the diagonal, the height is 1.0 On lines parallel to the diagonal, height is constant

  28. Volume under slice = (z)(L-z)2 L yi-yj=0 yi-yj= z z/2 yj z /2 yi Total volume = Basic bluff-body aerodynamics • Total fluctuating force on a slender body : Consider the contribution from the slice as shown : Length of slice = (L-z)2 (reduced to single integral)

  29. End of Lecture 9John Holmes225-405-3789 JHolmes@lsu.edu

More Related