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Combined Immersed-Boundary Finite-Difference Methods for Three-Dimensional Complex Flow Simulations

โœ Scribed by E.A. Fadlun; R. Verzicco; P. Orlandi; J. Mohd-Yusof


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
413 KB
Volume
161
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9991

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โœฆ Synopsis


A second-order accurate, highly efficient method is developed for simulating unsteady three-dimensional incompressible flows in complex geometries. This is achieved by using boundary body forces that allow the imposition of the boundary conditions on a given surface not coinciding with the computational grid. The governing equations, therefore, can be discretized and solved on a regular mesh thus retaining the advantages and the efficiency of the standard solution procedures. Two different forcings are tested showing that while the quality of the results is essentially the same in both cases, the efficiency of the calculation strongly depends on the particular expression. A major issue is the interpolation of the forcing over the grid that determines the accuracy of the scheme; this ranges from zeroth-order for the most commonly used interpolations up to second-order for an ad hoc velocity interpolation. The present scheme has been used to simulate several flows whose results have been validated by experiments and other results available in the literature. Finally in the last example we show the flow inside an IC piston/cylinder assembly at high Reynolds number; to our knowledge this is the first example in which the immersed boundary technique is applied to a full three-dimensional complex flow with moving boundaries and with a Reynolds number high enough to require a subgrid-scale turbulence model.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


An Immersed-Boundary Finite-Volume Metho
โœ Jungwoo Kim; Dongjoo Kim; Haecheon Choi ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2001 ๐Ÿ› Elsevier Science ๐ŸŒ English โš– 378 KB

A new immersed-boundary method for simulating flows over or inside complex geometries is developed by introducing a mass source/sink as well as a momentum forcing. The present method is based on a finite-volume approach on a staggered mesh together with a fractional-step method. Both momentum forcin