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Three-dimensionality effects in flow around two tandem cylinders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2006

GEORGIOS V. PAPAIOANNOU
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
DICK K. P. YUE
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
MICHAEL S. TRIANTAFYLLOU
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
GEORGE E. KARNIADAKIS
Affiliation:
Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA

Abstract

The flow around two stationary cylinders in tandem arrangement at the laminar and early turbulent regime, ($\hbox{\it Re}\,{=}\,10^2$$10^3$), is studied using two- and three-dimensional direct numerical simulations. A range of spacings between the cylinders from 1.1 to 5.0 diameters is considered with emphasis on identifying the effects of three-dimensionality and cylinder spacing as well as their coupling. To achieve this, we compare the two-dimensional with corresponding three-dimensional results as well as the tandem cylinder system results with those of a single cylinder. The critical spacing for vortex formation and shedding in the gap region depends on the Reynolds number. This dependence is associated with the formation length and base pressure suction variations of a single cylinder with Reynolds number. This association is useful in explaining some of the discrepancies between the two-dimensional and three-dimensional results. A major effect of three-dimensionality is in the exact value of the critical spacing, resulting in deviations from the two-dimensional predictions for the vorticity fields, the forces on the downstream cylinder, and the shedding frequency of the tandem system. Two-dimensional simulations under-predict the critical spacing, leading to erroneous results for the forces and shedding frequencies over a range of spacings where the flow is qualitatively different. To quantify the three-dimensional effects we first employ enstrophy, decomposed into a primary and a secondary component. The primary component involves the vorticity parallel to the cylinder axis, while the secondary component incorporates the streamwise and transverse components of the vorticity vector. Comparison with the single cylinder case reveals that the presence of the downstream cylinder at spacings lower than the critical value has a stabilizing effect on both the primary and secondary enstrophy. Systematic quantification of three-dimensionalities involves finding measures for the intensity of the spanwise fluctuations of the forces. This also verifies the stabilization scenario, suggesting that when the second cylinder is placed at a distance smaller than the critical one, three-dimensional effects are suppressed compared to the single-cylinder case. However, when the spacing exceeds the critical value, the upstream cylinder tends to behave like a single cylinder, but three-dimensionality in the flow generally increases.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2006 Cambridge University Press

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