Abstract
The objective of this work is to present a conservative coupling method between an inviscid compressible fluid and a deformable structure undergoing large displacements. The coupling method combines a cut-cell Finite Volume method, which is exactly conservative in the fluid, and a symplectic Discrete Element method for the deformable structure. A time semi-implicit approach is used for the computation of momentum and energy transfer between fluid and solid, the transfer being exactly balanced. The coupling method is exactly mass-conservative (up to round-off errors in the geometry of cut-cells) and exhibits numerically a long-time energy-preservation for the coupled system. The coupling method also exhibits consistency properties, such as conservation of uniform movement of both fluid and solid, absence of numerical roughness on a straight boundary, and preservation of a constant fluid state around a wall having tangential deformation velocity. The performance of the method is assessed on test cases involving shocked fluid flows interacting with two and three-dimensional deformable solids undergoing large displacements.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 241-262 |
| Number of pages | 22 |
| Journal | Journal of Computational Physics |
| Volume | 296 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Sept 2015 |
Keywords
- Conservative method
- Energy preservation
- Finite volume
- Fluid-structure interaction
- Immersed boundary
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