Elucidating the 3D topology of a cantilevered square cylinder wake using multi-time-delay estimation with FIR-based SPOD

ORAL

Abstract

FIR-based spectral proper orthogonal decomposition (SPOD) (Sieber et al., 2016) is used for remote-sensor based estimation of a highly modulated bluff body wakes. The estimator is trained on individual stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (PIV) planes synchronized with surface pressure measurements. Estimation is then used to reconstruct time-resolved 3D coherent motions with the aim of investigating cycle-to-cycle variations in vortex interactions. The candidate flow is the near turbulent, quasi-periodic near-wake of a cantilevered square cylinder with a height-to-width ratio 4, protruding a thin laminar boundary layer at a Reynolds number of 10600. In a phase-averaged sense, the wake is described as a half-loop shedding pattern, consisting of inter-connected Kármán vortex structures.

We show the benefits of this convolutional SPOD in reconstructing the flow and identifying coherent wake interactions. Unlike phase-averaging, which provides only a representation of the average contributions at the fundamental Kármán shedding frequency (fs) and its harmonics, the present approach also captures slow-varying motions at fL = 0.1fs and inter-harmonic contributions. The slow-varying motion, which arises from shear layer instabilities originating at the obstacle free-end, is shown to modulate intensity of the fundamental vortex-shedding. Inclusion of the inter-harmonic modes allows capturing of shedding disruptions, which in extreme cases manifest as vortex dislocations.

*The authors acknowledge the financial support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (through the Discovery Grant, Research Tool and Instrumentation and the Collaborative Research Grants programs) and the University of Calgary (through the Ruby Doctoral Scholarship).

Presenters

  • Chris Morton

    • McMaster University

Authors

  • Chris Morton

    • McMaster University
  • Ali Mohammadi

    • University of Calgary
  • Robert J Martinuzzi

    • University of Calgary