4.1. Evolution of the Flow Field around a Cylinder in the ISW
We created ISW flow fields with collapse heights of 0.1 m, 0.2 m, and 0.3 m, respectively, using the gravity collapse method. The velocity distributions in the horizontal direction are shown in
Figure 5. Comparison reveals that the horizontal velocities induced by the ISW are bounded by the pycnocline, and the upper and lower layers of fluid move in opposite directions. The horizontal velocity on the vertical line at the wave trough position is the largest in the whole flow field. For this reason, the horizontal velocities on the vertical line at the wave trough position for the three cases are extracted and dimensionless. The correlation curves are shown in
Figure 6. In order to perform the dimensionless treatment, we introduced the linear long wave velocity
c0 as shown in Equation (7). Due to the uniform thickness of the pycnocline, the horizontal velocity of the ISW gradually increases with the increase in the collapse height
h. The horizontal velocity of the ISW increases gradually. This leads to a more drastic change in the value of the velocity in the pycnocline. The analysis of the flow field here provides the basis for the following analysis of the force law of the column in the internal wave at different scales.
In order to explore the evolution law of the flow field around the cylinder in the ISW, we extracted the results of the time-series flow field of the ISW interacting with the cylinder at three scales, as shown in
Figure 7. We find that the ISW induces an elliptical flow field with its nucleus located at the wave trough. It rotates clockwise and moves forward. The tangential direction of the streamlines represents the direction of the velocity at the local location. Based on the orientation of the streamlines, we can see that the horizontal velocities of the upper and lower layers are opposite. At the initial stage of the contact between the ISW and the cylinder, there is almost no backflow on the backflow region of the cylinder. As time progresses, the backflow area in the backflow region gradually increases and the value of the wake velocity gradually increases. In addition, after the wave trough reaches the location of the cylinder, the cylindrical wake gradually becomes chaotic as the scale of the ISW increases. We can find from the distribution of the streamlines. In addition, we also analyzed the change in wavefront and the distribution of shear stress on the wall of the cylinder when the ISW flows through the cylinder, as shown in
Figure 8. There is a lifting phenomenon of the wavefront at the back of the cylinder. As the scale of the ISW increases and the time advances, the area of the lifted wavefront behind the cylinder increases gradually and becomes chaotic. This is the effect of the cylinder on the wave surface, and in turn, the ISW generates shear stress on the surface of the cylinder. There will be symmetrical areas of high shear stress from the flow onset point to the separation point. For the cylinders in the upper and lower layers, the wall shear stresses applied are in opposite directions. In addition, the wall shear stress distribution in the wake region gradually becomes chaotic, a behavior caused by the shedding of the wake vortex of the cylinder.
To further quantitatively analyze the variation of the cylindrical wall shear stress, we extracted the maximum value of the forward direction and the backward direction of the cylindrical wall shear stress, which are shown in
Figure 9 and
Figure 10. The changes in their values reflect the extreme stress state of the cylinder. We find that both of them have the trend of gradually increasing to the maximum value and then decreasing. However, the wall shear stress in the forward direction will be higher than that in the backward direction. For example, in the case of h = 0.3 m, the peak value of wall shear stress in the forward direction is 0.214 Pa, while the peak value of wall shear stress in the backward direction is 0.139 Pa. The peak value in the forward direction is 35% higher than in the reverse direction. This is due to the difference in horizontal velocity values between the upper and lower layers of the ISW. We also find that there is a fluctuation in the value of the wall shear stress as the trough of the ISW gradually moves away from the cylinder. The greater the collapse height
h, the more pronounced the fluctuation.
4.2. Force Characteristics of Cylinders in the ISW
In order to investigate the force law of the cylinder in the ISW, we divide the whole cylinder into 40 segments at equal distances along the vertical direction, and the length of each segment is 0.02 m, since the horizontal force exerted on the cylinder is the dominant factor threatening the safety of the cylinder when it interacts with the ISW. Therefore, in this paper, the horizontal force ensemble is calculated by integrating the pressure and velocity shear on the surface of the cylinder. The force on the whole cylinder can be viewed as the sum of the contribution of the force on each segment of the cylinder at the time, i.e., as the sum of the normal pressure and tangential viscous components [
23].
where
sf is the face area,
P is the pressure,
µ is the dynamic viscosity,
us is the velocity shear at the cylinder surface,
h is the distance between cylinder section and bottom boundary,
is the unit surface normal around the cylinder, and
is the unit tangential vector along the velocity direction.
The force on the cylinder is a time-varying process, as the ISW travels through the cylinder. We extracted the lift force
Fl and drag force
Fd of the cylinder, the variation of which is shown in
Figure 11 and
Figure 12, where
Fl is positive vertically upward and
Fd is positive horizontally to the right. For
Fl, it exhibits a gradual increase and then decrease in each of the up and down directions. It can be considered that the cylinder has a tendency to vibrate up and down. For
Fd, the force is realized as an increase and then a decrease, and the force is always positive. It can be seen that
Fd is 10 times greater than
Fl. Therefore, the horizontal force on the cylinder should be more concerned for safety reasons. To analyze the force details of the cylinder, we further extracted the lift and drag forces applied to each segment of the cylinder, see
Figure 13 and
Figure 14. For each segment of the cylinder, the drag force continues to be much greater than the lift force. In addition, we find that the direction of the force on each segment of the cylinder is almost the same at all times. Although some segments of the force are not in the same direction, the shear phenomenon induced by the lift force is much weaker compared to the drag force. Therefore, for the structural safety of the cylinder in the ISW, we should pay more attention to the variation of the drag force in its horizontal direction.
We can find that the drag forces on the cylinder are in opposite directions between the upper and lower layers as it traverses the ISW, which is bounded by the intermediate pycnocline. As the scale of the ISW becomes larger, the strength of the force on the cylinder increases. In addition, we can find that the trough of the ISW arrives at the position where the cylinder is located at t = 12 s. Therefore, the process of the cylinder travelling through the ISW can be divided into two stages: the cylinder is gradually approaching the trough from 0 to 12 s; and the cylinder is gradually moving away from the trough from 12 s to 20 s. In the first stage, the distribution of the force characteristics of the cylinder is similar to the horizontal velocity of the ISW flow field. In the second stage the horizontal force distribution becomes chaotic, and the larger the ISW scale is, the more chaotic it is.
In order to further analyze the force commonality of the cylinders under different scales of ISW, we carried out the dimensionless quantification of the horizontal force. The distribution of the horizontal force after dimensionless sizing is shown in
Figure 15. In the first stage, when the scale of the ISW increases, the force on the cylinders also increases. In addition, the cylindrical forces in the upper fluid become progressively more complex with time evolution. In the second stage, the force on the cylinder in the upper fluid becomes smaller instead as the ISW scale increases.
Figure 16 reflects the force behavior of the whole cylinder in the ISW. We find that the force at h = 0.2 m is consistently larger than the case of h = 0.1 m. When h = 0.3 m, the force profile of the cylinder changes more complicatedly. Sometimes it is lower than the previous two cases, but its peak point is higher than the two, and its trend is consistent with the previous two.
where
is the horizontal force,
represents the density of the upper layer,
is the maximum value of transverse velocity,
D is the diameter of the cylinder, and
H is the total water depth in the tank.
In addition, we calculated the force on the cylinder under the influence of pressure to find out the specific reasons that affect the force evolution of the cylinder, as shown in
Figure 17a.
Figure 17b represents the total combined force, and
Figure 17c represents the difference between the pressure-induced force on the cylinder and the total combined force. We use the concept of relative error as shown in Equation (10). After comparison, the share of viscous shear stress is larger when the combined force is close to zero. However, most of the time, the pressure-induced horizontal force dominates the total horizontal force. Therefore, we extracted the pressure distributions at the positions of h = 0.1 m and cylinder heights of 0.5 m and 0.7 m. The height of 0.5 m corresponds to the lower part of the pycnocline, and 0.7 m is located in the upper part of the pycnocline. In this way, we can analyze the pressure variations of the cylinder as it traverses the ISW. For the first stage, we show the pressure distribution at four moments, t = 4 s, 6 s, 8 s, and 10 s, as shown in
Figure 18. The value of the pressure on the walls of the cylinders gradually increases from the beginning of the contact of the cylinder with the ISW to the trough until the arrival of the cylinder at the trough position. The pressure on the upper cylinder is greater than that on the lower one. This is because the horizontal velocity field induced by the ISW is different in magnitude between the upper and lower layers. In addition, we can also find that the pressure extremes appear near the flow separation point on the headward side. The pressure values in the separation zone on the backflow side of the cylinder also increase gradually with time. When the cylinder reaches the trough, the evolution of the pressure distribution on its wall is shown in
Figure 19. We can see that the pressure on the head side is gradually weakened, and the pressure on the back side is gradually strengthened. When t = 16 s, the pressure on the backflow surface has exceeded the pressure on the onflow surface. At this time, the direction of the horizontal force on the cylinder is reversed. Thereafter, the pressure on the backflow surface continues to increase, which leads to a consequent increase in the horizontal force on the cylinder.
Figure 17.
Pressure-induced horizontal forces versus total combined forces. (a) Pressure-induced horizontal forces. (b) Total combined forces. (c) The difference between the pressure-induced force and the total combined forces.
Figure 17.
Pressure-induced horizontal forces versus total combined forces. (a) Pressure-induced horizontal forces. (b) Total combined forces. (c) The difference between the pressure-induced force and the total combined forces.
where
RE represents relative error,
is the horizontal force, and
is the pressure-induced horizontal force.
4.3. Spatiotemporal Evolution Patterns of Cylindrical Trailing Vortex
In the above article, we found that the horizontal force on the cylinder will show a certain pattern of change when it crosses the ISW. Previous studies have also shown that the force on the cylinder is closely related to the shedding phenomenon of its wake [
24]. Therefore, we try to analyze the force characteristics of the cylinder from the evolution characteristics of the cylindrical trailing vortex. We adopt the dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) method to extract the main modes. These main modes represent the dominant flow structure in the whole time period [
25]. The intrinsic flow of information can be mined by analyzing its spatial and temporal evolution.
Before using the DMD method, multiple snapshots of time over a period of time must be integrated into a two-dimensional matrix [
26]. The complete time snapshot matrix is then divided into two matrices,
,.
Assuming that
is linearly correlated with
, we can obtain the matrix
A. The
A matrix can be calculated by eigendecomposition
. This step is obtained based on the low-rank approximation of the data matrix.
Eigenvalues and eigenvectors are obtained utilizing rank truncation. These eigenvalues move forward in time. The state at each time in the original data can be calculated by the linear combination of DMD modes (columns
of
), eigenvalues (
), and corresponding modal amplitudes
b:
In this study, the interaction of ISWs with the cylinder is an unsteady process. Therefore, we selected 2000 snapshots. The time interval between two snapshots is 0.01 s. The total duration is 20 s. In addition, we found that the trough of the ISW arrives at the location of the cylinder at t = 12 s. Therefore, the whole flow field is divided into two segments with t = 12 s as discontinuity. For the first segment, we extracted the cylindrical trailing vortex modes in three scales of ISWs. The lower the corresponding frequency of the mode, the higher the energy contributed. That is, the order of frequencies determines the order of modes. For the trailing vortex field around the cylinder under the influence of the three scaled ISWs, we extract the first three orders of the modes.
In
Figure 20, we have extracted two vortex equivalent surfaces for
= −0.008 and
= 0.008, respectively, to demonstrate their tailing vortex patterns. The corresponding time evolution curves for each mode are shown in
Figure 21. By comparing the mode 1 distributions for the three cases, it can be seen that the tailing vortex of the cylinder gradually grows as the ISW scale increases. However, as the ISW scale continues to increase, the distribution of the tailing vortex in the upper layer of the cylinder becomes irregular. The time evolution curves also show that the intensity of the tailing vortex gradually increases when the cylinder is close to the wave trough. The larger the ISW scale, the stronger and faster the intensity of the tailing vortex grows. This can also be compared to the force behavior of the cylinder, see
Figure 14. In the first stage, as the ISW scale gradually increases, the force of the cylinder also increases and becomes chaotic. We can also see that the gradient of the change in force increases. For modes 2 and 3, they represent the higher frequency features of the flow field compared to mode 1, and the distribution of mode 2 is similar to that of mode 1. Mode 3 represents the smaller vortexes in the flow field, which are more complex than the first two modes. However, its total energy content is much smaller than that of the first two modes. In addition, according to the time evolution curves, it is found that the amplitude change in the corresponding modes is proportional to the scale of the internal wave. Moreover, the frequencies of the corresponding modes are almost the same under the three working conditions.
For the second stage in which the trough gradually moves away from the cylinder, we similarly extracted the first three orders of modes of the cylindrical trailing vortex during this process, which are shown in
Figure 22. The time evolution curves corresponding to each mode are shown in
Figure 23. Upon comparison, it is found that the trend of the evolution of the corresponding modes in this phase is exactly opposite to that of the first phase. In addition, the modal distribution of the vorticity in this stage is very different from that of the first stage. Taking mode 1 as an example, the wake of the cylinder in the upper layer gradually becomes chaotic when the trough gradually moves away from the cylinder. In terms of time evolution, the change in mode 1 is exactly opposite to the first stage, which is gradually weakened, and the final value comes to the same. And the larger the ISW is, the stronger the corresponding mode strength is at the same moment, the more it decreases. The above changes in the cylindrical tailing vortex can exactly confirm the force manifestation of the cylinder in the second stage in
Figure 17. The force distribution of the part of the cylinder in the upper layer also becomes cluttered with the increase in the ISW scale. Comparing the performances of the first three stages of modes, we find that the cylinder can still maintain a stable vortex shedding in the ISW generated at h = 0.1 m. By the time h = 0.2 m, the vortex shedding of the cylinder becomes extremely unstable. Until h = 0.3 m, almost no stable vortex shedding appears. This is something we can analyze against from the dimensionless horizontal force distribution, as shown in
Figure 15.