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Engineering Analysis and Design with ALE-VMS and Space-Time Methods

Journal

ARCHIVES OF COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN ENGINEERING
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 481-508

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11831-014-9113-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA JSC [NNX13AD87G]
  2. ARO [W911NF-12-1-0162, W911NF-11-1-0083]
  3. Rice-Waseda research agreement
  4. NASA [NNX13AD87G, 475258] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26220002, 24760144] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Flow problems with moving boundaries and interfaces include fluid-structure interaction (FSI) and a number of other classes of problems, have an important place in engineering analysis and design, and offer some formidable computational challenges. Bringing solution and analysis to them motivated the Deforming-Spatial-Domain/Stabilized Space-Time (DSD/SST) method and also the variational multiscale version of the Arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian method (ALE-VMS). Since their inception, these two methods and their improved versions have been applied to a diverse set of challenging problems with a common core computational technology need. The classes of problems solved include free-surface and two-fluid flows, fluid-object and fluid-particle interaction, FSI, and flows with solid surfaces in fast, linear or rotational relative motion. Some of the most challenging FSI problems, including parachute FSI, wind-turbine FSI and arterial FSI, are being solved and analyzed with the DSD/SST and ALE-VMS methods as core technologies. Better accuracy and improved turbulence modeling were brought with the recently-introduced VMS version of the DSD/SST method, which is called DSD/SST-VMST (also ST-VMS). In specific classes of problems, such as parachute FSI, arterial FSI, ship hydrodynamics, fluid-object interaction, aerodynamics of flapping wings, and wind-turbine aerodynamics and FSI, the scope and accuracy of the FSI modeling were increased with the special ALE-VMS and ST FSI techniques targeting each of those classes of problems. This article provides an overview of the core ALE-VMS and ST FSI techniques, their recent versions, and the special ALE-VMS and ST FSI techniques. It also provides examples of challenging problems solved and analyzed in parachute FSI, arterial FSI, ship hydrodynamics, aerodynamics of flapping wings, wind-turbine aerodynamics, and bridge-deck aerodynamics and vortex-induced vibrations.

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