Collective Behavior of Clusters of Free-to-Move Cylinders in the Wake of a Fixed Cylinder
We study the collective behavior of clusters of cylinders placed in the wake of a fixed cylinder and free to move in a direction perpendicular to that of the incoming flow, with no structural damping or stiffness. We keep the Reynolds number, defined based on the cylinder diameter, at 100 and consid...
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Zusammenfassung: | We study the collective behavior of clusters of cylinders placed in the wake
of a fixed cylinder and free to move in a direction perpendicular to that of
the incoming flow, with no structural damping or stiffness. We keep the
Reynolds number, defined based on the cylinder diameter, at 100 and consider
five different configurations for the initial positions of the cluster
cylinders: linear, rectangular, V-shaped, triangular, and circular. In each
configuration, we consider progressively increasing number of cylinders in the
cluster. We show that overall, the cylinders tend to form final linear
configurations, in which, after their transition, the cylinders form one or
more lines. Some free-to-move cylinders might take the lead position in some of
these linear formations depending on the initial configuration. These
steady-state positions are achieved when the mean value of lift that acts on
the cylinders becomes negligible. As a byproduct of these reconfigurations, the
overall drag force that acts on the collection of cylinders reduces at their
final steady-state locations in comparison with their original configurations.
The complicated wakes that are observed in the fixed counterparts of these
configurations are replaced by a series of vortex rows in the wake of separate
lines of cylinders. Reducing the mass ratio allows the cylinders to oscillate
about their mean displacement paths, but their transient paths and their final
steady-state positions are not affected significantly by the decrease in the
mass ratio. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.11160 |