Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6925529 | Finite Elements in Analysis and Design | 2018 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
The deployment of a thin, one-segment, large membrane space structure is examined by the means of a real time quasi-static inflation experiment with photogrammetry and finite element analysis with the explicit and implicit schemes applied to control volume, corpuscular and arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian inflation methods. The numerical solutions comparison is based on mesh size, energy ratio, number of particles, bleed-through leak coefficient, fluid pressure - surface depth stiffness coupling, accuracy and computational efficiency. An optimization of the number of particles and minimization of the bleed-through effects is effectively implemented in corpuscular and ALE approaches. The corpuscular and arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian are found to be most resembling the experimental results in the dynamic shape changes and the time history of the gas properties, but computationally expensive. The control volume, although computationally efficient, is lacking the adequate fluid-structure interaction, thus less accurately recreating the overall dynamics of the morphing surface. Only 0.2%-1.75% and 0.5%-2.5% difference is observed between the experimental, analytical and finite element inflation results respectively.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Science Applications
Authors
Radek Glaser, Vincent Caccese, Mohsen Shahinpoor,