This paper deals with the active flow-induced vibration (FIV) suppression of two identical tandem-arranged circular cylinders at a low Reynolds number of Re=100. The adopted control system employs fuzzy PID controller in which the desired control force is computed based on the cylinder displacement amplitude, and applied transversely for effective attenuation of flow-induced instabilities in both transverse and streamwise directions. Moreover, the effect of FIV suppression of each cylinder on the response amplitude of other one, and the simultaneous vibration reduction of both cylinders are investigated based on fully-coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) simulations. The rigid body motion equations in streamwise and transverse directions are incorporated into the computational fluid dynamics solver to treat the coupling which exists between the fluid flow and cylinders movement. Next, in the utilized co-simulations, the active fuzzy PID controller implemented in Matlab/Simulink is coupled with the FSI oscillator model constructed in computational fluid dynamics solver package. It was shown that, the sudden suppression of the upstream cylinder vibration causes quick distortion in the flow field around the rear cylinder, and consequently, its steady-state response amplitude is destabilized and experiences transient fluctuations once again. On the contrary, the decrease in the transverse oscillation of the downstream cylinder leaves no sensible effect on the vibration of upstream cylinder. In particular, the active control system effectively reduces the transverse displacement amplitudes of upstream and downstream cylinders by as much as 99.9% and 98.7%, respectively, for Vr=5.5, while the corresponding values are 99.8% and 99.7% for Vr=7.5. This superb performance of active FIV control systems is mainly due to de-synchronization-type action in which the vortex shedding frequency is deviated from the oscillator natural frequency. Lastly, it is demonstrated that the vortex shedding patterns for uncontrolled cylinders, which primarily depend on reduced velocity, are turned very similar to that of the stationary cylinders after adopting the fully active control systems.
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