The evaluation of the aerodynamic admittance is a fundamental step in the calculation of the buffeting response of flexible structures immersed in turbulent flows such as long-span bridges and slender towers. As it is wellknown, bluff sections immersed in turbulent flows often exhibit a complex aerodynamic behavior, which can be greatly affected by the turbulence intensity and the integral length scales of the impinging turbulence. In this paper, computational fluid dynamics is used for the evaluation of the admittance functions of a 6:1 rectangular cylinder. Firstly, the incoming turbulence is synthetically generated. Then the aerodynamic admittance functions are evaluated considering five different inflow conditions using Large Eddy Simulations. The use of synthetic inflows allows to easily separate the role played by each characteristic of the inflow turbulence, so allowing to separately study the effect of the turbulence intensity and the length scales.
Li, W., Patruno, L., Niu, H., de Miranda, S., Hua, X. (2021). Aerodynamic admittance of a 6:1 rectangular cylinder: A computational study on the role of turbulence intensity and integral length scale. JOURNAL OF WIND ENGINEERING AND INDUSTRIAL AERODYNAMICS, 218, 1-15 [10.1016/j.jweia.2021.104738].
Aerodynamic admittance of a 6:1 rectangular cylinder: A computational study on the role of turbulence intensity and integral length scale
Patruno, L.
;de Miranda, Stefano;
2021
Abstract
The evaluation of the aerodynamic admittance is a fundamental step in the calculation of the buffeting response of flexible structures immersed in turbulent flows such as long-span bridges and slender towers. As it is wellknown, bluff sections immersed in turbulent flows often exhibit a complex aerodynamic behavior, which can be greatly affected by the turbulence intensity and the integral length scales of the impinging turbulence. In this paper, computational fluid dynamics is used for the evaluation of the admittance functions of a 6:1 rectangular cylinder. Firstly, the incoming turbulence is synthetically generated. Then the aerodynamic admittance functions are evaluated considering five different inflow conditions using Large Eddy Simulations. The use of synthetic inflows allows to easily separate the role played by each characteristic of the inflow turbulence, so allowing to separately study the effect of the turbulence intensity and the length scales.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.