Beam Flutter and Energy Harvesting in Internal Flow

ORAL

Abstract

Aeroelastic flutter, largely studied for causing engineering failures, has more recently been used as a means of extracting energy from the flow. Particularly, flutter of a cantilever or an elastically mounted plate in a converging-diverging flow passage has shown promise as an energy harvesting concept for internal flow applications. The instability onset is observed as a function of throat velocity, internal wall geometry, fluid and structure material properties. To enable these devices, our work explores features of the fluid-structure coupled dynamics as a function of relevant nondimensional parameters. The flutter boundary is examined through stability analysis of a reduced order model, and corroborated with numerical simulations at low Reynolds number. Experiments for an energy harvester design are qualitatively compared to results from analytical and numerical work, suggesting a robust limit cycle ensues due to a subcritical Hopf bifurcation.

Authors

  • Luis Phillipe Tosi

    Caltech

  • Tim Colonius

    California Institute of Technology, Caltech, Department of Mechanical and Civil Engineering, California Institute of Technology

  • Stewart Sherrit

    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

  • Hyeong Jae Lee

    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology