To ensure the safety of bridges, the comfort of pedestrians and vehicles on bridges, the vortex-induced forces on flat-steel-box girders need to be investigated. The total vortex-induced forces integrated on the surfaces of girders have been studied extensively. This study will be mainly focused on the characteristics of surface distributed vortex-induced force, which can be beneficial to the vortex-induced vibration (VIV) reduction with local aerodynamic optimization. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) method is employed for the simulation of the VIVof a flat-steel-box girder. The simulation results are verified through the comparison with the results of corresponding wind tunnel test. A self-adaptive nonlinear fitting method is proposed to determine the vortex-induced force model. A vortex-induced force contribution factor is defined to account the contribution of the components and the surface location. Based on the surface distributed vortex-induced force analysis, several conclusions are made. The vortex-induced force presents a fairly strong multiple-frequency characteristic, and the high-order terms should be carefully considered. Most energy of the VIV comes from the linear and third-order aerodynamic damping terms. In terms of location, the roof takes most of the aerodynamic damping and the total vortex-induced force. The flow separation around the underside upstream corner, the underside downstream corner and the middle downstream comer lead to large third-order aerodynamic damping term. The flow separation around the underside upstream corner has great contribution to the linear aerodynamic stiffness term.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, X. Y., Wang, B., Zhu, L. D., & Li, Y. L. (2018). Numerical study on surface distributed vortex-induced force on a flat-steel-box girder. Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics, 12(1), 41–56. https://doi.org/10.1080/19942060.2017.1337593
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