Litcius/Paper detail

Flow-induced vibration and energy harvesting of an elastically mounted circular cylinder with mechanically coupled rotation

Ming Zhao, Qin Zhang, Yong Liu

2025Journal of Fluid Mechanics6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One-degree-of-freedom flow-induced vibration (FIV) and energy harvesting through FIV of an elastically mounted circular cylinder with mechanically coupled rotation were investigated numerically for low Reynolds number 100, mass ratio 8 and a wide range of reduced velocities. The aims of this study are to investigate the effect of the flow direction angle $\beta$ on the vibration and energy harvesting through FIV. Two types of lock-in are found: vortex-induced vibration (VIV) and galloping. The response amplitude increases with the increase of $\beta$ in both regimes. Both VIV response and galloping regimes are found for $\beta$ = 45° to $\beta$ = 90°. For $\beta$ = −90° to $\beta$ = 0°, only VIV response regimes are found. The fluid force and fluid torque play different roles in exciting/damping the vibration. In the high-amplitude gallop regime, the fluid force excites the vibration, and the torque damps the vibration. Energy harvesting at flow direction angle 90° is investigated as this flow direction has the maximum galloping amplitude. The energy harvesting is achieved by a linear electric damping coefficient in the numerical model. The maximum harvestable power in the galloping regime is significantly greater than that in the VIV regime, and it increases with the increase of the reduced velocity. When the reduced velocity is 20, the harvested power is over 20 times that in the VIV regime, and can further increase if reduced velocity further increases. The maximum efficiency over all simulated parameters is 0.424, occurring when the reduced velocity is 20, and electric damping factor is 0.04.

Topics & Concepts

Energy harvestingMechanicsVibrationVortex-induced vibrationRotation (mathematics)Reynolds numberCylinderMaterials scienceTorqueMechanical energyPhysicsFlow (mathematics)AmplitudeRange (aeronautics)AcousticsAdded massEnergy (signal processing)Maximum power principleDamping torqueEnergy flowRotational speedElectric potential energyPower (physics)Oscillation (cell signaling)Fluid–structure interactionFlow control (data)VoltageClassical mechanicsEnergy transformationFlow velocityFluid dynamicsFluid Dynamics and Vibration AnalysisVibration and Dynamic AnalysisAerodynamics and Fluid Dynamics Research