Previous studies investigating the effect of aspect ratio ($\mathit{AR}$) for insect-like regimes have reported seemingly different trends in aerodynamic forces, however no detailed flow observations have been made. In this study, the effect of $\mathit{AR}$ and Reynolds number on the flow structures over insect-like wings is explored using a numerical model of an altered fruit fly wing revolving at a constant angular velocity. Increasing the Reynolds number for an $\mathit{AR}$ of 2.91 resulted in the development of a dual leading-edge vortex (LEV) structure, however increasing $\mathit{AR}$ at a fixed Reynolds number generated the same flow structures. This result shows that the effects of Reynolds number and $\mathit{AR}$ are linked. We present an alternative scaling using wing span as the characteristic length to decouple the effects of Reynolds number from those of $\mathit{AR}$. This results in a span-based Reynolds number, which can be used to independently describe the development of the LEV. Indeed, universal behaviour was found for various parameters using this scaling. The effect of $\mathit{AR}$ on the vortex structures and aerodynamic forces was then assessed at different span-based Reynolds numbers. Scaling the flow using the wing span was found to apply when a strong spanwise velocity is present on the leeward side of the wing and therefore may prove to be useful for similar studies involving flapping or rotating wings at high angles of attack.
International audienceThis study examines the influence of angle of attack of a square section cylinder on the cylinder's flow-induced vibration, where the direction of the vibration is transverse to the oncoming flow. Our experiments, which traversed the velocity-angle of attack parameter space in considerable breadth and depth, show that a low-mass ratio body can undergo combinations of both vortex-induced vibration and galloping. When the body has an angle of attack that makes it symmetric to the flow, such as when it assumes the square or diamond orientation, the two mechanisms remain independent. However, when symmetry is lost we find a mixed mode response with a new branch of vortex-induced oscillations that exceeds the amplitudes resulting from the two phenomena independently. The oscillations of this higher branch have amplitudes larger than the 'upper branch' of vortex-induced vibrations and at half the frequency. For velocities above this resonant region, the frequency splits into two diverging branches. Analysis of the amplitude response reveals that the transition between galloping and vortex-induced vibrations occurs over a narrow range of angle of incidence. Despite the rich set of states found in the parameter space the vortex shedding modes remain very similar to those found previously in vortex-induced vibration
This study investigates the free transverse flow-induced vibration (FIV) of an elastically mounted low-mass-ratio square cylinder in a free stream, at three different incidence angles: α = 0 • , 20 • and 45 • . This geometric setup presents a body with an angle of attack, sharp corners and some afterbody, and therefore is a generic body that can be used to investigate a wide range of FIV phenomena. A recent study by Nemes et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 710, 2012, pp. 102-130) provided a broad overview of the flow regimes present as a function of both the angle of attack α and reduced flow velocity U * . Here, the focus is on the three aforementioned representative angles of attack: α = 0 • , where the FIV is dominated by transverse galloping; α = 45 • , where the FIV is dominated by vortex-induced vibration (VIV); and an intermediate value of α = 20 • , where the underlying FIV phenomenon has previously been difficult to determine. For the α = 0 • case, the amplitude of oscillation increases linearly with the flow speed except for a series of regimes that occur when the vortex shedding frequency is in the vicinity of an odd-integer multiple of the galloping oscillation frequency, and the vortex shedding synchronizes to this multiple of the oscillation frequency. It is shown that only odd-integer multiple synchronizations should occur. These synchronizations explain the 'kinks' in the galloping amplitude response for light bodies first observed by Bearman et al. (J. Fluids Struct., vol. 1, 1987, pp. 19-34). For the α = 45 • case, the VIV response consists of a number of subtle, but distinctly different regimes, with five regimes of high-amplitude oscillations, compared to two found in the classic VIV studies of a circular cylinder. For the intermediate α = 20 • case, a typical VIV 'upper branch' occurs followed by a 'higher branch' of very large-amplitude response. The higher branch is caused by a subharmonic synchronization between the vortex shedding and the body oscillation frequency, where two cycles of vortex shedding occur over one cycle of oscillation. It appears that this subharmonic synchronization is a direct result of the asymmetric body. Overall, the FIV of the square cylinder is shown to be very rich, with a number of distinct regimes, controlled by both α and U * . Importantly, α controls the underlying FIV phenomenon, as well as controlling the types of possible synchronization between the oscillation and vortex shedding.
The wake states from a circular cylinder undergoing controlled sinusoidal oscillation transverse to the free stream are examined. As the frequency of oscillation passes through the natural Kármán frequency there is a transition between two distinctly different wake states: the low-and high-frequency states. The transition corresponds to a change in the structure of the near wake and is also characterized by a jump in the phase and amplitude of both the total and vortex lift. Over the range of flow and oscillation parameters studied the wake states exhibit a number of universal features. The phases of the vortex lift and drag forces have characteristic values for the low-and high-frequency states, which appear to be directly related to the phase of vortex shedding. A split force concept is employed, whereby instantaneous force traces and images allow discrimination between the actual loading and the physics, and their conventional time-averaged representations. The wake states for the forced oscillations show some remarkable similarities to the response branches of elastically mounted cylinders. The equivalence between forced and self-excited oscillations is addressed in detail using concepts of energy transfer.
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