CFD Online Logo CFD Online URL
www.cfd-online.com
[Sponsors]
Home > Forums > Software User Forums > ANSYS > CFX

Vortex shedding, FSI-analysis, turbulence numerics

Register Blogs Community New Posts Updated Threads Search

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old   May 1, 2010, 07:39
Default Vortex shedding, FSI-analysis, turbulence numerics
  #1
New Member
 
Andreas
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 6
Rep Power: 16
tallknuseren is on a distinguished road
Hello,

I'm trying to simulate 2d-vortex shedding behind an asymmetric blade profile, where a part of the blade from the trailing edge and upstream is flexible and free to oscillate in the transversal direction. (It's actually two bodies, one approx. rigid and one flexible, linked together.) Inlet specified by normal velocity and medium turbulence intensity, pressure outlet.

My mesh counts approx. 100k elements, using mostly tri.elements and hex.elements in the boundary layer. Pretty small cells in the near wake downstrem the trailing edge.

My numerics settings: SST turbulence model, high resolution adv. scheme, second order euler. Tried both first order turbulence numerics and high resolution. Timestep is set to approx. 70 steps per shedding cycle. 1-3 coeff. loops and 3-5 stagger iterations per timestep, as recommended in the CFX-manual. RMS residual target = 1e-4 by default.

My residual plots confuse me, especially the Turb. frequency. It's pretty spiky, ranging between 2 orders of magnitude within a fem timesteps. Other things, like momentum and mass converge nicely to approx 1e-5. I've concidered my max. residuals, and they are typically located to the sharp corners at my geometry, which I can understand. About my monitor points - I monitor pressure and transversal velocity at approx. 10 spots in the wake. These plots seems pretty random to me..

When wathcing my results in CFD-post, I'm not able to see the vortex street in the wake. In an early model, where the fluid domain ranged from the start of the flexible blade, a little coarser mesh and no FSI were included, the vortex street came easily. Though, I'm not quite sure about the numerics settings used in this early attempt...

The images in this folder describes the most about the case:
http://folk.ntnu.no/andrebe/
(Mesh has been further refined after these shots were taken.)

And yes - I know that vortex shedding is widely discussed in this forum, because I've red most of it already. Same about the CFD-manual, regarding the numerics settings etc.. I'm really struggeling with this case, and the long time spent running simulations with (wrong) settings is not very effective.

Best regards,
Andreas Berg
Norway
--
Master graduate student,
this summer entering a job at a Marine thruster manufacturing company.
tallknuseren is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   May 2, 2010, 07:15
Default
  #2
Super Moderator
 
Glenn Horrocks
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Sydney, Australia
Posts: 17,703
Rep Power: 143
ghorrocks is just really niceghorrocks is just really niceghorrocks is just really niceghorrocks is just really nice
Nothing leaps out as wrong, but you are trying to do a fair difficult simulation. I would recommend checking the timestep size and mesh size sensitivities.
ghorrocks is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   May 5, 2010, 10:19
Default
  #3
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 531
Rep Power: 21
stumpy is on a distinguished road
It sounds like adding FSI into the mix caused the problems. There are many things that could be wrong in the FSI setup/convergence. It would really need some debugging from an FSI expert, so I would recommend asking your Ansys support contact to take a look at the case.
stumpy is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   May 10, 2010, 04:31
Default
  #4
New Member
 
Andreas
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 6
Rep Power: 16
tallknuseren is on a distinguished road
Quote:
Originally Posted by stumpy View Post
It sounds like adding FSI into the mix caused the problems. There are many things that could be wrong in the FSI setup/convergence. It would really need some debugging from an FSI expert, so I would recommend asking your Ansys support contact to take a look at the case.
I'm afraid you are pretty right about that. In this moment, I am now running the same analysis, but I have disabled mesh motion and external solver coupling, running a completely "stiff" analysis. Yet the simulation has just began, my convergence plots and monitor points are behaving quite nicely.

Best regards,
Andreas Berg
Norway
--
Master graduate student,
this summer entering a job at a Marine thruster manufacturing company.
tallknuseren is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply

Tags
fsi, shedding, sst, turbulence, vortex


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
K-Epsilon for Vortex Shedding Sham FLUENT 33 March 29, 2017 05:48
Discussion: Reason of Turbulence!! Wen Long Main CFD Forum 3 May 15, 2009 09:52
Vortex shedding behind cylider in cross flow Muthu FLUENT 0 March 6, 2006 10:29
Turbulence model for vortex shedding PLN Prasad Siemens 2 September 1, 2003 23:05


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 22:30.