Bulletin of the American Physical Society
71st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 63, Number 13
Sunday–Tuesday, November 18–20, 2018; Atlanta, Georgia
Session G25: Flow Instability: Kelvin-Helmholtz, Wakes & Pulsatile Flow
10:35 AM–12:45 PM,
Monday, November 19, 2018
Georgia World Congress Center
Room: B313
Chair: Yuji Tasaka, Hokkaido University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DFD.G25.4
Abstract: G25.00004 : Frequency predictions from global stability in the Benard vortex street
11:14 AM–11:27 AM
Presenter:
Jose Eduardo Wesfreid
(PMMH-ESPCI)
Authors:
Jose Eduardo Wesfreid
(PMMH-ESPCI)
Yacine Bengana
(PMMH-ESPCI)
In 1908, Henri Bénard published the results of his experiments performed in Lyon-France on the discovery of an alternate vortex street when a body of prismatic shape is displaced in a fluid at rest. Using optical methods and cinematography, Bénard obtained the value of the frequency of the vortex shedding for this bluff body, with different sizes, velocities of the body and viscosities of the fluid. The comparison of this results (in modern terms, the variation of the Strouhal number with the Reynolds number) with similar ones obtained after, with a cylinder, by Karman and Rubach (1912), Kruger (1914), Relf (1921) and Camichel (1927), provided, in the 30’s, discussions. In this talk, we are presenting for the first time, more than a century later, quantitative predictions of the Strouhal number evolution for the geometry used in the pioneering experiments of Bénard. Global linear stability study is applied using the time averaged or mean base flow behind this prismatic body. We are comparing these predictions with the original experimental results. Similar comparisons are presented for the case of the vortex shedding from cylinders observed in many historical experiments beginning with Strouhal’ ones in 1878.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DFD.G25.4
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