Abstract

The two-dimensional incompressible laminar viscous flow of a conducting fluid past a square cylinder placed centrally in a channel subjected to an imposed transverse magnetic field has been simulated to study the effect of a magnetic field on vortex shedding from a bluff body at different Reynolds numbers varying from 50 to 250. The present staggered grid finite difference simulation shows that for a steady flow the separated zone behind the cylinder is reduced as the magnetic field strength is increased. For flows in the periodic vortex shedding and unsteady wake regime an imposed transverse magnetic field is found to have a considerable effect on the flow characteristics with marginal increase in Strouhal number and a marked drop in the unsteady lift amplitude indicating a reduction in the strength of the shed vortices. It has further been observed, that it is possible to completely eliminate the periodic vortex shedding at the higher Reynolds numbers and to establish a steady flow if a sufficiently strong magnetic field is imposed. The necessary strength of the magnetic field, however, depends on the flow Reynolds number and increases with the increase in Reynolds number. This paper describes the algorithm in detail and presents important results that show the effect of the magnetic field on the separated wake and on the periodic vortex shedding process.

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