Abstract

Gap vortex streets characterise many industrial applications involving rod bundle flows, such as heat exchangers and nuclear reactors. These structures, known as gap vortex streets, may excite the structural components of the bundle to resonance, leading to fretting and fatigue. This work aims to measure these coherent structures and the resulting displacement and oscillation frequency of the neighbouring rod, to provide unique data for fluid-structure interaction studies and to develop a general correlation for estimating the coherent structure’s wavelength. A water loop was built to host a hexagonal rod bundle. Fluorinated Ethylene Prophylene (FEP), a refractive index matching (RIM) material, was used to have undisturbed optical access in the area around the central rod. The flow was measured with Laser Doppler Anemometry (LDA) to detect coherent structures, while the vibrations were measured with a high speed camera. A new correlation for estimating the wavelength of the coherent structures is derived with dimensional analysis based on experimental evidence. The correlation is tested on different geometries: rectangular channels with single or half-rods, and two rod bundles, within the pitch-to-diameter ratio (P/D) range 1.02–1.2. Moreover fluctuations in the flow, given by the detected coherent structures, govern the structural response of the rod. The rod is excited to resonance if these fluctuations match twice the natural frequency of the rod.

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