Wind and Structures

Volume 20, Number 1, 2015, pages 37-58

DOI: 10.12989/was.2015.20.1.037

Detached eddy simulation of flow around rectangular bodies with different aspect ratios

Hee Chang Lim and Masaaki Ohba

Abstract

As wind flows around a sharp-edged body, the resulting separated flow becomes complicated, with multiple separations and reattachments as well as vortex recirculation. This widespread and unpredictable phenomenon has long been studied academically as well as in engineering applications. In this study, the flow characteristics around rectangular prisms with five different aspect ratios were determined through wind tunnel experiments and a detached eddy simulation, that placed the objects in a simulated deep turbulent boundary layer at Re=4.6 X 10 ^4. A series of rectangular prisms with the same height (h = 80 mm), different longitudinal lengths (l = 0.5h, h, and 2h), or different transverse widths (w = 0.5h, h, and 2h) were employed to observe the effects of the aspect ratio. Furthermore, five wind directions (0, 10, 20, 30, and 45) were selected to observe the effects of the wind direction. The simulated results of the surface pressure were compared to the wind tunnel experiment results and the existing results of previous papers. The vortex and spectrum were also analyzed to determine the detailed flow structure around the body. The paper also highlights the pressure distribution around the rectangular prisms with respect to the different aspect ratios. With an increasing transverse width, the surface suction pressure on the top and side surfaces becomes stronger. In addition, depending on the wind direction, the pressure coefficient experiences a large variation and can even change from a negative to a positive value on the side surface of the cube model.

Key Words

rectangular prisms; flow characteristics; aspect ratio; wind direction; wind-tunnel test; detached-eddy simulation

Address

Hee Chang Lim: School of Mechanical Engineering, Pusan National University, San 30, Jangjeon-Dong, Geumjeong-Gu, Busan, 609-735, South Korea Masaaki Ohba: Department of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, Tokyo Polytechnic University, Atsugi, Kanagawa, 243-02/3, Japan