Wind and Structures
Volume 20, Number 5, 2015, pages 661-682
DOI: 10.12989/was.2015.20.5.661
Rectangular prism pressure coherence by modified Morlet continuous wavelet transform
Thai-Hoa Le and Luca Caracoglia
Abstract
This study investigates the use of time-frequency coherence analysis for detecting and evaluating coherent \"structures\" of surface pressures and wind turbulence components, simultaneously on the time-frequency plane. The continuous wavelet transform-based coherence is employed in this
time-frequency examination since it enables multi-resolution analysis of non-stationary signals. The wavelet
coherence quantity is used to identify highly coherent \"events\" and the \"coherent structure\" of both wind
turbulence components and surface pressures on rectangular prisms, which are measured experimentally. The study also examines, by proposing a \"modified\" complex Morlet wavelet function, the influence of the time-frequency resolution and wavelet parameters (i.e., central frequency and bandwidth) on the wavelet coherence of the surface pressures. It is found that the time-frequency resolution may significantly affect the accuracy of the time-frequency coherence; the selection of the central frequency in the modified complex Morlet wavelet is the key parameter for the time-frequency resolution analysis. Furthermore, the concepts of time-averaged wavelet coherence and wavelet coherence ridge are used to better investigate the
time-frequency coherence, the coherently dominant events and the time-varying coherence distribution. Experimental data derived from physical measurements of turbulent flow and surface pressures on rectangular prisms with slenderness ratios B/D=1:1 and B/D=5:1, are analyzed.
Key Words
bluff body; time-frequency analysis; turbulence; pressure distribution; flow separation/attachment/reattachment
Address
Thai-Hoa Le:Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115, USA;
Department of Engineering Mechanics and Automation, Vietnam National University, Hanoi, 144 Xuanthuy Rd., Hanoi, Vietnam
Luca Caracoglia: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115, USA