13 research outputs found

    Fluid force and symmetry breaking modes of a 3D bluff body with a base cavity

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    International audienceA cavity at the base of the squareback Ahmed model at Re 4 × 10 5 is able to reduce the base suction by 18% and the drag coefficient by 9%, while the geometry at the separation remains unaffected. Instantaneous pressure measurements at the body base, fluid force measurements and wake velocity measurements are investigated varying the cavity depth from 0 to 35% of the base height. Due to the reflectional symmetry of the rectangular base, there are two Reflectional Symmetry Breaking (RSB) mirror modes present in the natural wake that switch from one to the other randomly in accordance with the recent findings of Grandemange et al. (2013b). It is shown that these modes exhibit an energetic 3D static vortex system close to the base of the body. A sufficiently deep cavity is able to stabilize the wake toward a symmetry preserved wake, thus suppressing the RSB modes and leading to a weaker elliptical toric recirculation. The stabilization can be modelled with a Langevin equation. The plausible mechanism for drag reduction with the base cavity is based on the interaction of the static 3D vortex system of the RSB modes with the base and their suppression by stabilization. There are some strong evidences that this mechanism may be generalized to axisym-metric bodies with base cavity

    Asymmetry and global instability of real minivans' wake

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    © 2018 Elsevier Ltd Three minivan cars tested in real flow conditions are investigated through base pressure distribution, force balance and velocity measurements. Discontinuous transitions of permanent wake reversals and bistable dynamics between two well-defined states are observed varying ground clearance, pitch and yaw, with open and closed air-intake. These transitions prove that the cars undergo the same global z-instability as the square-back Ahmed body (M. Grandemange, M. Gohlke and O. Cadot, Physics of Fluids, 25, 2013). The contribution of the global instability to the lift coefficient is estimated to 0.012 and 0.024 depending on the wake state. Eventually, the potential of direct passive control of the z-instability is demonstrated by improving from 4.6% to 8.3% the drag reduction obtained by closing the front air-intake of the car

    A positivity-preserving pressure-correction method

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