Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6928477 | Journal of Computational Physics | 2018 | 47 Pages |
Abstract
We present a three-dimensional (3D) common-refinement method for non-matching unstructured meshes between non-overlapping subdomains of incompressible turbulent fluid flow and nonlinear hyperelastic structure. The fluid flow is discretized using a stabilized Petrov-Galerkin method, and the large deformation structural formulation relies on a continuous Galerkin finite element method. An arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian formulation with a nonlinear iterative force correction (NIFC) coupling is achieved in a staggered partitioned manner by means of fully decoupled implicit procedures for the fluid and solid discretizations. To begin, we first investigate the accuracy of common-refinement method (CRM) to satisfy the traction equilibrium condition along the fluid-elastic interface with non-matching meshes. We systematically assess the accuracy of CRM against the matching grid solution by varying grid mismatch between the fluid and solid meshes over a tubular elastic body. We demonstrate the second-order accuracy of CRM through uniform refinements of fluid and solid meshes along the interface. We then extend the error analysis to transient data transfer across non-matching meshes between the fluid and solid solvers. We show that the common-refinement discretization across non-matching fluid-structure grids yields accurate transfer of the physical quantities across the fluid-solid interface. We next solve a 3D fluid-structure interaction (FSI) problem of a cantilevered hyperelastic plate behind a circular bluff body and verify the accuracy of coupled solutions with respect to the available solution in the literature. By varying the solid interface resolution, we generate various non-matching grid ratios and quantify the accuracy of CRM for the nonlinear structure interacting with a laminar flow. We illustrate that the CRM with the partitioned NIFC treatment is stable for low solid-to-fluid density ratio and non-matching meshes for the 3D FSI problem. Finally, we demonstrate the 3D parallel implementation of the common-refinement with the NIFC method for a realistic engineering problem of drilling riser undergoing complex vortex-induced vibration with strong added mass effects and turbulent wake flow.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Science Applications
Authors
Yulong Li, Yun Zhi Law, Vaibhav Joshi, Rajeev K. Jaiman,