In the present study, a bypass passive jet flow control method was proposed to mitigate unsteady wind loads and to manipulate the flow field around a single box girder of a bridge. With a geometric ratio of 1:125, the single box girder model was determined using the cross-section of the Great Belt East Bridge. During the experiments, one test model without control was adopted, while five different test models with different suction/jet configurations were employed to analyze the effects of the control method and to reveal the underlying mechanism of different control schemes. The incoming wind speed was fixed to 12 m/s and the wind attack angles were changed from -20° to 20°, resulting in a corresponding Reynolds number of Re = 0.28×105-0.74×105 based on the different attack angles. A six-component force balance, a set of digital sensor array (DSA) pressure transducers, and a particle image velocimetry (PIV) system was used to measure the aerodynamic forces, pressure distributions, and flow fields around the test models to evaluate the control effectiveness of different control cases. Detailed flow structures are presented and discussed for two test cases when the angles of attack are +15° and -20°. The effects of control on the aerodynamic forces were first investigated to determine and select the best one out of five control cases. The pressure distributions on the surface of the test model without control and the best control case were then compared to evaluate the control effectiveness of the pressure gradient and the fluctuating pressure coefficients. The flow fields around the test models demonstrate that the bypass passive jet flow control could decrease vortex strength, delay flow separation, and change recirculation region and size. The results of the aerodynamic forces, pressure distributions, and flow fields indicate that the bypass passive jet flow control method results in effective control.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, L. Q., Chen, G. B., Chen, W. L., & Gao, D. L. (2017). Separation control on a bridge box girder using a bypass passive jet flow. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 7(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/app7060501
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