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A harmonic balance technique for the reduced-order computation of vortex-induced vibration
Institution:1. Monash University, Malaysua School of Engineering, Jalan Lagoon Selatan 47500, Bandar Sunway, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia;2. Swinburne University, PO Box 218, Hawthorn VIC 3122, Australia;1. IMSIA, EDF–CNRS–CEA–ENSTA ParisTech UMR 9219, Clamart Cedex, France;2. IMFT, Av. du prof. Camille Soula, 31400 Toulouse, France;3. ICUBE, Strasbourg, France;1. State Key Laboratory of Ocean Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China;2. Collaborative Innovation Center for Advanced Ship and Deep-Sea Exploration, Shanghai 200240, China;2. China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, 430074, China;3. Department of Scientific Computing, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, 32306-4120, USA
Abstract:We present a harmonic balance (HB) method to model frequency lock-in effect during vortex-induced vibration (VIV) of elastically mounted circular cylinder and a flexible riser section in a freestream uniform flow. The fluid flow and structure are coupled by a fixed-point iteration process through a frequency updating algorithm. By minimizing the structural residual in the standard least-square norm, the convergence of HB-based fixed-point algorithm is achieved for a range of reduced velocity. To begin with, the HB solver is first assessed for a periodic unsteady flow around a stationary circular cylinder. A freely vibrating circular cylinder is then adopted for the reduced-order computation of VIV at low Reynolds numbers of Re=100 and 180 with one- and two-degrees-of-freedom. The coupled VIV dynamics and the frequency lock-in phenomenon are accurately captured. The results show that the HB solver is able to predict the amplitude of vibration, frequency and forces comparable to its time domain counterpart, while providing a significant reduction with regard to overall computational cost. The proposed new scheme is then demonstrated for a fully-coupled three dimensional (3D) analysis of a linear-elastic riser section undergoing vortex-induced vibration in the lock-in range. The results reveal the 3D effects through isosurfaces of streamwise vorticity blobs distributed over the span of flexible riser section. In comparison to time domain results, the 3D flow-structure interactions are accurately predicted while providing a similar speed up rate that of 2D simulations. This further corroborates that the HB solver can be extended to 3D flow-structure dynamics without compromising efficiency and accuracy.
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