A fully-coupled simulation of vortical structures in a large-scale buoyant pool fire

2009 ◽  
Vol 48 (12) ◽  
pp. 2187-2202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sherman C.P. Cheung ◽  
G.H. Yeoh
2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajesh Rawat ◽  
Jennifer P. Spinti ◽  
Wing Yee ◽  
Philip J. Smith

Abstract In a large-scale pool fire simulation, the processes that must be modeled are complex and coupled. The flow is often highly turbulent, dynamic vortical structures are present, the chemical reactions involve several thousand elementary steps and hundreds of species/intermediates, and radiation, the dominant mode of heat transfer, is strongly affected by the presence of soot. The range of length and time scales associated with all these processes cannot be simulated on even the most powerful supercomputers available today. Our approach to making this intractable problem tractable has been twofold: one, to improve the models used at all levels in the simulation (i.e., transport models and subgrid scale models) and two, to parallelize the simulation tool to run on massively parallel machines. We have employed Large Eddy Simulation (LES) to model the fluid dynamics and the convection-diffusion scalar transport. LES successfully captures the transient nature of the coherent vortical structures present in a pool fire. We have integrated these improved models into a computational framework that provides support for parallelization. Preliminary validation results show the capability of the fire simulation tool to capture the puffing nature of pool fires. In addition, scalability studies of the simulation tool reveal close to linear scalability up to 500 processors.


Energy ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 121389
Author(s):  
Xuejing Zheng ◽  
Qihang Sun ◽  
Yaran Wang ◽  
Lijun Zheng ◽  
Xinyong Gao ◽  
...  

VLSI Design ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 8 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 53-58
Author(s):  
Christopher M. Snowden

A fully coupled electro-thermal hydrodynamic model is described which is suitable for modelling active devices. The model is applied to the non-isothermal simulation of pseudomorphic high electron mobility transistors (pHEMTs). A large-scale surface temperature model is described which allows thermal modelling of semiconductor devices and monolithic circuits. An example of the application of thermal modelling to monolithic circuit characterization is given.


1984 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 13-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. Cherry ◽  
R. Hillier ◽  
M. E. M. P. Latour

Measurements of fluctuating pressure and velocity, together with instantaneous smoke-flow visualizations, are presented in order to reveal the unsteady structure of a separated and reattaching flow. It is shown that throughout the separation bubble a low-frequency motion can be detected which appears to be similar to that found in other studies of separation. This effect is most significant close to separation, where it leads to a weak flapping of the shear layer. Lateral correlation scales of this low-frequency motion are less than the reattachment length, however; it appears that its timescale is about equal to the characteristic timescale for the shear layer and bubble to change between various shedding phases. These phases were defined by the following observations: shedding of pseudoperiodic trains of vortical structures from the reattachment zone, with a characteristic spacing between structures of typically 60% to 80% of the bubble length; a large-scale but irregular shedding of vorticity; and a relatively quiescent phase with the absence of any large-scale shedding structures and a significant ‘necking’ of the shear layer downstream of reattachment.Spanwise correlations of velocity in the shear layer show on average an almost linear growth of spanwise scale up to reattachment. It appears that the shear layer reaches a fully three-dimensional state soon after separation. The reattachment process does not itself appear to impose an immediate extra three-dimensionalizing effect upon the large-scale structures.


Author(s):  
Paulo Yu ◽  
Vibhav Durgesh

An aneurysm is an abnormal growth in the wall of a weakened blood vessel, and can often be fatal upon rupture. Studies have shown that aneurysm shape and hemodynamics, in conjunction with other parameters, play an important role in growth and rupture. The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of varying inflow conditions on flow structures in an aneurysm. An idealized rigid sidewall aneurysm model was prepared and the Womersley number (α) and Reynolds number (Re) values were varied from 2 to 5 and 50 to 250, respectively. A ViVitro Labs pump system was used for inflow control and Particle Image Velocimetry was used for conducting velocity measurements. The results showed that the primary vortex path varied with an increase in α, while an increase in Re was correlated to the vortex strength and formation of secondary vortical structures. The evolution and decay of vortical structures were also observed to be dependent on α and Re.


Author(s):  
Daryl Hickey ◽  
Luc Masset ◽  
Gaetan Kerschen ◽  
Olivier Bru¨ls

Analysing large scale, nonlinear, multiphysical, dynamical structures, by using mathematical modelling and simulation, e.g. Finite Element Modelling (FEM), can be computationally very expensive, especially if the number of degrees-of-freedom is high. This paper develops modal reduction techniques for such nonlinear multiphysical systems. The paper focuses on Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD), a multivariate statistical method that obtains a compact representation of a data set by reducing a large number of interdependent variables to a much smaller number of uncorrelated variables. A fully coupled, thermomechanical model consisting of a multilayered, cantilever beam is described and analysed. This linear benchmark is then extended by adding nonlinear radiative heat exchanges between the beam and an enclosing box. The radiative view factors, present in the equations governing the heat fluxes between beam and box elements, are obtained with a ray-tracing method. A reduction procedure is proposed for this fully coupled nonlinear, multiphysical, thermomechanical system. Two alternative approaches to the reduction are investigated, a monolithic approach incorporating a scaling factor to the equations, and a partitioned approach that treats the individual physical modes separately. The paper builds on previous work presented previously by the authors. The results are given for the RMS error between either approach and the original, full solution.


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