Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms

The full-scale value of the Reynolds number associated with wind loads on structures is of the order of 10^7. This is further complicated by the high levels of turbulence fluctuations associated with strong winds. On the other hand, numerical and wind tunnel simulations are usually carried out at sm...

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Main Author: Ge, Zhongfu
Other Authors: Engineering Science and Mechanics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/25965
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01082005-001412/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-259652020-09-26T05:33:04Z Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms Ge, Zhongfu Engineering Science and Mechanics Hajj, Muhammad R. Kohler, Werner E. Masoud, Ziyad N. Henneke, Edmund G. II Ragab, Saad A. Tieleman, Henry W. velocity and pressure fluctuations higher-order spectra wavelet statistics pressure coefficient Low-rise structures wind loads The full-scale value of the Reynolds number associated with wind loads on structures is of the order of 10^7. This is further complicated by the high levels of turbulence fluctuations associated with strong winds. On the other hand, numerical and wind tunnel simulations are usually carried out at smaller values of Re. Consequently, the validation of these simulations should only be based on physical phenomena derived with tools capable of their identification. In this work, two physical aspects related to extreme wind loads on low-rise structures are examined. The first includes the statistical properties and prediction of pressure peaks. The second involves the identification of linear and nonlinear relations between pressure peaks and associated velocity fluctuations. The first part of this thesis is concerned with the statistical properties of surface pressure time series and their variations under different incident flow conditions. Various statistical tools, including space-time correlation, conditional sampling, the probability plot and the probability plot correlation coefficient, are used to characterize pressure peaks measured on the top surface of a surface-mounted prism. The results show that the Gamma distribution provides generally the best statistical description for the pressure time series, and that the method of moments is sufficient for determining its parameters. Additionally, the shape parameter of the Gamma distribution can be directly related to the incident flow conditions. As for prediction of pressure peaks, the results show that the probability of non-exceedence can best be derived from the Gumbel distribution. Two approaches for peak prediction, based on analysis of the parent pressure time series and of observed peaks, are presented. The prediction based on the parent time series yields more conservative estimates of the probability of non-exceedence. The second part of this thesis is concerned with determining the linear and nonlinear relations between pressure peaks and the velocity field. Validated by analytical test signals, the wavelet-based analysis is proven to be effective and accurate in detecting intermittent linear and nonlinear relations between the pressure and velocity fluctuations. In particular, intermittent linear and nonlinear velocity pressure relations are observed over the nondimensional frequency range fH/U<0.32. These results provide the basis for flow parameters and characteristics required in the simulation of the wind loads on structures. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:06:38Z 2014-03-14T20:06:38Z 2004-12-14 2005-01-08 2008-01-12 2005-01-12 Dissertation etd-01082005-001412 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/25965 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01082005-001412/ dissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic velocity and pressure fluctuations
higher-order spectra
wavelet
statistics
pressure coefficient
Low-rise structures
wind loads
spellingShingle velocity and pressure fluctuations
higher-order spectra
wavelet
statistics
pressure coefficient
Low-rise structures
wind loads
Ge, Zhongfu
Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
description The full-scale value of the Reynolds number associated with wind loads on structures is of the order of 10^7. This is further complicated by the high levels of turbulence fluctuations associated with strong winds. On the other hand, numerical and wind tunnel simulations are usually carried out at smaller values of Re. Consequently, the validation of these simulations should only be based on physical phenomena derived with tools capable of their identification. In this work, two physical aspects related to extreme wind loads on low-rise structures are examined. The first includes the statistical properties and prediction of pressure peaks. The second involves the identification of linear and nonlinear relations between pressure peaks and associated velocity fluctuations. The first part of this thesis is concerned with the statistical properties of surface pressure time series and their variations under different incident flow conditions. Various statistical tools, including space-time correlation, conditional sampling, the probability plot and the probability plot correlation coefficient, are used to characterize pressure peaks measured on the top surface of a surface-mounted prism. The results show that the Gamma distribution provides generally the best statistical description for the pressure time series, and that the method of moments is sufficient for determining its parameters. Additionally, the shape parameter of the Gamma distribution can be directly related to the incident flow conditions. As for prediction of pressure peaks, the results show that the probability of non-exceedence can best be derived from the Gumbel distribution. Two approaches for peak prediction, based on analysis of the parent pressure time series and of observed peaks, are presented. The prediction based on the parent time series yields more conservative estimates of the probability of non-exceedence. The second part of this thesis is concerned with determining the linear and nonlinear relations between pressure peaks and the velocity field. Validated by analytical test signals, the wavelet-based analysis is proven to be effective and accurate in detecting intermittent linear and nonlinear relations between the pressure and velocity fluctuations. In particular, intermittent linear and nonlinear velocity pressure relations are observed over the nondimensional frequency range fH/U<0.32. These results provide the basis for flow parameters and characteristics required in the simulation of the wind loads on structures. === Ph. D.
author2 Engineering Science and Mechanics
author_facet Engineering Science and Mechanics
Ge, Zhongfu
author Ge, Zhongfu
author_sort Ge, Zhongfu
title Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
title_short Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
title_full Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
title_fullStr Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
title_sort analysis of surface pressure and velocity fluctuations in the flow over surface-mounted prisms
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/25965
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01082005-001412/
work_keys_str_mv AT gezhongfu analysisofsurfacepressureandvelocityfluctuationsintheflowoversurfacemountedprisms
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