UNIFIED CONTINUUM MODELING OF FLUID-STRUCTURE INTERACTION
0211 other engineering and technologies
02 engineering and technology
DOI:
10.1142/s021820251100512x
Publication Date:
2011-03-22T10:48:13Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
In this paper, we describe an incompressible Unified Continuum (UC) model in Euler (laboratory) coordinates with a moving mesh for tracking the fluid-structure interface as part of the discretization, allowing simple and general formulation and efficient computation. The model consists of conservation equations for mass and momentum, a phase convection equation and a Cauchy stress and phase variable θ as data for defining material properties and constitutive laws. We target realistic 3D turbulent fluid-structure interaction (FSI) applications, where we show simulation results of a flexible flag mounted in the turbulent wake behind a cube as a qualitative test of the method, and quantitative results for 2D benchmarks, leaving adaptive error control for future work. We compute piecewise linear continuous discrete solutions in space and time by a general Galerkin (G2) finite element method (FEM). We introduce and compensate for mesh motion by defining a local arbitrary Euler–Lagrange (ALE) map on each space-time slab as part of the discretization, allowing a sharp phase interface given by θ on cell facets. The Unicorn implementation is published as part of the FEniCS Free Software system for automation of computational mathematical modeling. Simulation results are given for a 2D stationary convergence test, indicating quadratic convergence of the displacement, a simple 2D Poiseuille test for verifying correct treatment of the fluid-structure interface, showing quadratic convergence to the exact drag value, an established 2D dynamic flag benchmark test, showing a good match to published reference solutions and a 3D turbulent flag test as indicated above.
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