Abstract

A single cylinder and two tandem cylinder configurations with longitudinal pitch ratios L/ D=1.75 and 2.5 were rigidly mounted in an open circuit wind tunnel and a standing acoustic pressure wave was imposed so that the acoustic particle velocity was normal to both the cylinder axis and the mean flow velocity. The effect of sound on the vortex-shedding was investigated for various amplitudes by means of pressure taps on the cylinders and wake hot-wire probes. These tests show that applied sound can entrain and shift the natural vortex-shedding frequency to the frequency of excitation and produce nonlinearities in the wake. The lock-in envelope for the tandem cylinders is considerably larger than for the single cylinder. The lock-in range for the smaller tandem cylinder spacing was broader still than either the single cylinder, or the L/ D=2.5 tandem cylinder case. The pressure and hot-wire measurements show for the single cylinder, and tandem cylinder configuration with pitch ratio L/ D=2.5, that there was a phase jump near the coincidence of the vortex-shedding frequency and the excitation frequency, while there was no jump for the pitch ratio of 1.75. As well, the applied sound field was also noted to induce vortex-shedding in the gap for the L/ D=2.5 case, while no vortex-shedding was noted for the smaller pitch ratio.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call