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Vortex Shedding in Bridge Engineering

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Vortex Shedding in Bridge Engineering. Kessock Bridge Case Study. Outline. Introduction of Bridge Aeroelasticity Research Methodology Kessock Bridge Background Experimentation Computational Simulation (CFD). Introduction. Bridge Failures in the History (wind-induced instabilities) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Vortex Shedding in Vortex Shedding in Bridge Engineering Bridge Engineering Kessock Bridge Case Kessock Bridge Case Study Study
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Page 1: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Vortex Shedding in Vortex Shedding in Bridge EngineeringBridge Engineering

Kessock Bridge Case Kessock Bridge Case

StudyStudy

Page 2: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

OutlineOutline

Introduction of Bridge

Aeroelasticity

Research Methodology

Kessock Bridge Background

Experimentation

Computational Simulation

(CFD)

Page 3: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

IntroductionIntroduction

Bridge Failures in the History (wind-induced instabilities)

Menai Strait Bridge; Bright Chain Pier; Tay Bridge (UK)

Deer Isle Bridge; Golden Gate Bridge (US)

Tacoma Narrows Bridge (Benchmark)

Classical Flutter Theory (Theodorsen)

Flight Failures (wing and wing-aileron flutter)

Langley’s Aerodome/monoplane flight failure

Fokker D-8 wing failures (1st world war)

Page 4: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Bridge AeroelasticityBridge Aeroelasticity

Flutter – Theories by R.H.Scanlan;

Buffeting – Theories by A.G.Davenport;

Vortex Induced Oscillation (VIO)

Lock-in Phenomenon;

Galloping;

Static Divergence;

Aim of ProjectAim of Project

Understanding the Physics of Vortex Induced Oscillation & Lock-in in Bridge Aeroelasticity

Page 5: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Research MethodologyResearch Methodology

Available Research Techniques

Analytical Method

Experimental Method

Computational Simulation (CFD)

MethodologyMethodology

Comparison of Experimental and CFD Results;

Parametric Study via CFD;

Page 6: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Kessock Bridge BackgroundKessock Bridge Background

Located in Inverness Scotland;

Encounters Relatively Strong Wind due to Local Topology

Central Span 240m;

Inverted U-shape Deck Cross-section Aerodynamically and Aeroelastically Unstable;

Full Scale Measurement (10.1991-05.1992 by Owen et.al)

Wind Tunnel Test (Dec.2003 UoN in UK & NTU in Sg)

CFD Computational Simulation (in progress)

Page 7: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

ExperimentationExperimentation

Wind Tunnel Test

Collaborative Experiment – University of Nottingham and NangYang Technological University

1:40 Scale Sectional Model of Kessock Bridge

Force Coefficients vs. Angles of Attack

Comprehensive Full Scale Data

Verification of Experimental Data

Page 8: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Computational Fluid Dynamics Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)(CFD)

Based on Navier-Stokes Equation;

Spatial and Temporal Discretisation;

Turbulence Modelling :-

Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS)

Detached Eddy Simulation (DES)

Large-Eddy Simulation (LES)

Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS)

Page 9: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

1/40 Sectional Model – Wind Tunnel Model

SST and DES Turbulence Scheme

Fine Hexahedral Mesh (0.8m-3.7m cells)

O-Grid Construction

Non-conformal General Grid Interface (GGI)

CFD SimulationCFD Simulation

Page 10: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Mesh Independence TestMesh Independence Test

SST Model

Angles of Attack - ±10° (2° increment);

Lift and Drag Coefficients;

Hexahedral Meshes :-

0.8m, 1.3m and 3.7m cells;

Different Arrangement of Cell Structure;

DES for Parametric Study-10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 10-0.5

-0.4

-0.3

-0.2

-0.1

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

Angle of Attack (degree)

Lift Coeffi

cien

t

Sensitivity of Lift Coefficient at Different Angles of Attack

Wind Tunnel Test

Moving Mesh SST

O-grid SST (1.3m)

O-grid SST (0.8m)

O-grid SST (3.7m)

Page 11: Vortex Shedding in  Bridge Engineering

Parametric StudyParametric Study

DES Run :-

Finer Mesh;

Wind Speed and Direction Effects;

Varying Turbulence Intensity;

Fluid Structure Interaction;Implication of Computation Facility :-

Accuracy of Simulation;

Realisticity of Simulation;


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