Numerical Simulation of the Viscous Flow Around Bluff Bodies Via the Random Vortex Method [microform]


Book Description

"The flow around multiple stationary cylinders is also simulated. Also, results are presented for the flow around two cylinders, one of which is forced to oscillate in a transverse direction. The numerical results of Strouhal number are in reasonable agreement with experiments." --




Numerical Simulation of the Viscous Flow Around Bluff Bodies Via the Random Vortex Method


Book Description

"The flow around multiple stationary cylinders is also simulated. Also, results are presented for the flow around two cylinders, one of which is forced to oscillate in a transverse direction. The numerical results of Strouhal number are in reasonable agreement with experiments." --
















Simulation of the Flow Past an Impulsively Started Cylinder Using a Discrete Vortex Method


Book Description

Vortex methods are a powerful method for simulating incompressible flows at high Reynolds number. This work extends the basic method to include viscous effects in the presence of solid boundaries. The combination of a fully viscous vortex method with a fast parallel algorithm is used to simulate the flow past an impulsively started cylinder. Experiments have shown that this flow is characterized by the presence of secondary eddies within the main recirculating region. The numerical simulations successfully reproduced these secondary structures over a wide range of Reynolds number (Re=550 to 9500). It was observed that the secondary phenomenon can lead to a major flow reorganization by drastically altering the transport of vorticity. At Re=550, the vortex sheet smoothly rolls up into the primary vortex. For Re=3000 and 9500, however, secondary eddies interfere with that process and the flux of vorticity is redirected toward the cylinder where it accumulates into a new vortical structure. The impulsive start is followed by a 1/(square root of t) singularity in the drag coefficients. The numerical simulations captured this behavior and the computed drag history for short times is in close agreement with the one predicted by a matched asymptotics analysis.







Numerical Simulation of Vortex-Dominated Flows Using the Penalized VIC Method


Book Description

Vorticity plays a key role in determining fluid flow dynamics, especially in vortex-dominated flows. Vortex methods, which are based on the vorticity-based formulation of the Navier-Stokes equations, have provided deeper insight into physical reality in a variety of flows using vorticity as a primary variable. The penalized vortex-in-cell (VIC) method is a state-of-the-art variant of vortex methods. In the penalized VIC method, Lagrangian fluid particles are traced by continuously updating their position and strength from solutions at an Eulerian grid. This hybrid method retains beneficial features of pure Lagrangian and Eulerian methods. It offers an efficient and effective way to simulate unsteady viscous flows, thereby enabling application to a wider range of problems in flows. This article presents the fundamentals of the penalized VIC method and its implementations.




Development and Applications of the Free-surface Random Vortex Method (FSRVM)


Book Description

"The objective of this work is to apply the free-surface random vortex method (FSRVM) to study the interactions of surface waves and bodies. A FSRVM-based "numerical wavetank" is used to calculate forces on submerged bodies. To study the response of a freely-floating body in waves, the dynamic coupling between a rigid body and the fluid is formulated. To further improve the efficiency of the FSRVM, merger and decay of blobs are introduced to alleviate computational efforts of vortex interactions" [Source : extrait de l'abstract, p. 1].