4.2 Article

Computational modeling and analysis of flow-induced vibration of an elastic splitter plate using a sharp-interface immersed boundary method

Journal

SN APPLIED SCIENCES
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1007/s42452-020-2876-z

Keywords

Fluid-structure interaction (FSI); Flow-induced vibration (FIV); Immersed boundary (IB) method

Funding

  1. Naval Research Board (NRB), New Delhi, India [NRB-403/-HYD/17-18]
  2. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB)
  3. Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)

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We present the development and benchmarking of an in-house fluid-structure interaction (FSI) solver. An implicit partitioned approach is utilized to couple a sharp-interface immersed boundary method-based flow solver and a finite-element method-based structural solver. In the present work, the coupling is accelerated using a dynamic under-relaxation scheme. The revised coupling is around two to three times faster and numerically stable, as compared to the one that uses a constant under-relaxation parameter. The solver is validated against two FSI benchmarks in which a thin, finite thickness, elastic splitter plate is attached to the lee side of a circular or square rigid cylinder, subjected to laminar flow. In these two-dimensional benchmarks, the flow induces a wave-like deformation in the plate, and it attains a periodic self-sustained oscillation. We employ the FSI solver to analyze the flow-induced vibration (FIV) of the plate in a uniform laminar free-stream flow for a wide range of mass ratio and bending stiffness at Reynolds number (Re) of 100, based on the diameter of the cylinder. At the given Re, two-dimensional numerical simulations show that the FIV of the plate effectively depends only on the mass ratio and bending stiffness. The largest displacement of the plate vibration is found to occur in the lock-in region, where the vortex shedding frequency of the coupled fluid-structure system is close to the natural frequency of the splitter plate. We briefly discuss wake structures and phase plots for different cases of mass ratio and bending stiffness.

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