Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7156930 | Computers & Fluids | 2015 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
The 3D boundary element method (BEM) based on the potential flow theory is developed to study the second-order resonance problems in rectangular sloshing tanks. Fully-nonlinear free-surface boundary conditions are considered. A local surface fitting method is used to calculate tangential derivatives. A shared-memory parallel procedure based on OpenMP is adopted for the efficiency improvement. Both 2D and 3D sloshing cases are studied. It is found that the second-order resonance may occur due to the interaction among natural frequencies and excitations frequencies. The second-order resonance becomes obvious after a sufficient long time length. After increasing the excitation amplitude, the second-order resonance emerges much earlier. For 3D situations, the second-order resonance in rectangular tanks with either equal or unequal length and width sides are investigated. The second-order resonances due to the interaction of two orthogonal plane waves in length and width directions are observed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Computational Mechanics
Authors
Chongwei Zhang, Yajie Li, Qicheng Meng,