Title of article :
A spectral-element method for modelling cavitation in transient fluid-structure interaction
Author/Authors :
M. A. Sprague، نويسنده , , T. L. Geers، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
In an underwater-shock environment, cavitation (boiling) occurs as a result of reflection of the shock
wave from the free surface and/or wetted structure causing the pressure in the water to fall below
its vapour pressure. If the explosion is sufficiently distant from the structure, the motion of the
fluid surrounding the structure may be assumed small, which allows linearization of the governing
fluid equations. In 1984, Felippa and DeRuntz developed the cavitating acoustic finite-element (CAFE)
method for modelling this phenomenon. While their approach is robust, it is too expensive for realistic
3D simulations. In the work reported here, the efficiency and flexibility of the CAFE approach
has been substantially improved by: (i) separating the total field into equilibrium, incident, and
scattered components, (ii) replacing the bilinear CAFE basis functions with high-order Legendrepolynomial
basis functions, which produces a cavitating acoustic spectral element (CASE) formulation,
(iii) employing a simple, non-conformal coupling method for the structure and fluid finite-element
models, and (iv) introducing structure–fluid time-step subcycling. Field separation provides flexibility,
as it admits non-acoustic incident fields that propagate without numerical dispersion. The use of
CASE affords a significant reduction in the number of fluid degrees of freedom required to reach a
given level of accuracy. The combined use of subcycling and non-conformal coupling affords orderof-
magnitude savings in computational effort. These benefits are illustrated with 1D and 3D canonical
underwatershock problems
Keywords :
field separation , time-step subcycling , non-conformal coupling , underwater shock
Journal title :
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering
Journal title :
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering