Numerical Simulation of Dynamic Instability for a Pipe Conveying Fluid

Author(s):  
Fabien Huvelin ◽  
Elisabeth Longatte ◽  
Vale´rie Verreman ◽  
M’hamed Souli

The present work is devoted to simulation of fluid-structure interaction and flow-induced vibration problems by using a partitioned procedure. A finite element structure solver is coupled with a finite volume fluid solver. A coupling interface has been developed for grid interpolation and scheme coupling control. An alternative mesh motion to a classical ALE formulation is proposed for the fluid computation and the method is validated by means of a test-case involving a pipe conveying fluid.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (24) ◽  
pp. 11918
Author(s):  
Haihai Gao ◽  
Changhong Guo ◽  
Lingxiao Quan

Fluid-structure interaction (FSI) is prevalent in aircraft hydraulic pipes due to high-pressure fluid pulsation, complex pipe path routing and boundary constraints, which pose a serious threat to the safety and reliability of the aircraft hydraulic system. This paper focuses on the FSI response of aircraft hydraulic pipes with complex constraints. A comprehensive fourteen-equation model for describing the FSI of pipe conveying fluid with wide pressure and Reynolds number range is proposed. The excitation models and complex boundary constraints of liquid-filled pipes are established. Moreover, based on the transfer matrix method (TMM), combined with the time discreteness and analytical integral method, a discrete time transfer matrix method (DTTMM) for solving the FSI fourteen-equation model in time domain is presented. Then, the numerical solution and experiment of an ARJ21-700 aircraft hydraulic pipe with complex constraints is carried out with four working conditions. The obtained results verify the correctness of the proposed model and solution method, and reveal the universal laws of the FSI response about aircraft hydraulic pipes, which can also provide theoretical and experimental references for modeling, solutions and verification in the FSI analysis of pipe conveying fluid.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-67
Author(s):  
Ansam Adel Mohammed ◽  
Haitham Mohsin Salman

Forced vibration has been experimentally investigated on a model consists of circular pipe with1.6m length. The pipe built in tank (1.2m length, 0.6m height and 0.6m width) horizontally at 0.4m height with two different diameters d=15mm and d=35mm. The pipe conveying laminar flow in the fully developed region, of Reynolds number equals 2000. The experimental results of span pipe conveying water at five stations of forced excitation vibration were studied. The harmonic forced vibration with two different excitation frequencies (10 Hz and 15 Hz) are imposed at all of the five locations. The distance between two stations is (0.2m). Two conditions of pipe environment have been applied, the first in air and the other was immersed in water. It is concluded that the effect of flow induced vibration due to the pipe conveying fluid increases the maximum deflection when the fluid speed increases. The water surrounds the pipes reduce the effect of excitation vibration about (33 – 46%). The effect difference between the excitation frequencies was about (4 – 7%).


Author(s):  
M. Benaouicha ◽  
E. Longatte ◽  
F. Baj

Fluid-structure interaction and flow-induced vibration in square cylinder arrangement under incompressible, ideal and irrotational cross flow are investigated in the present paper. The purpose of this study is to contribute to better understanding of external fluid loads exerted on long thin cylinders inducing the flow perturbations. Indeed, in presence of high flow confinement, the thin cylinders could be subjected to strong vibrations, which may lead to instability development and therefore to a risk of break or collision. The dynamic instability of the mobile tube, according to some geometric and flow parameters such as reduced velocity and pitch ratio, is then studied. A semi-analytical approach is used to determine a stability criterion of the dynamical system. In addition, the influence of key physical parameters on fluid-solid dynamics interaction is quantified in the studied configuration.


Author(s):  
Patrícia Tonon ◽  
Rodolfo André Kuche Sanches ◽  
Kenji Takizawa ◽  
Tayfun E. Tezduyar

AbstractGood mesh moving methods are always part of what makes moving-mesh methods good in computation of flow problems with moving boundaries and interfaces, including fluid–structure interaction. Moving-mesh methods, such as the space–time (ST) and arbitrary Lagrangian–Eulerian (ALE) methods, enable mesh-resolution control near solid surfaces and thus high-resolution representation of the boundary layers. Mesh moving based on linear elasticity and mesh-Jacobian-based stiffening (MJBS) has been in use with the ST and ALE methods since 1992. In the MJBS, the objective is to stiffen the smaller elements, which are typically placed near solid surfaces, more than the larger ones, and this is accomplished by altering the way we account for the Jacobian of the transformation from the element domain to the physical domain. In computing the mesh motion between time levels $$t_n$$ t n and $$t_{n+1}$$ t n + 1 with the linear-elasticity equations, the most common option is to compute the displacement from the configuration at $$t_n$$ t n . While this option works well for most problems, because the method is path-dependent, it involves cycle-to-cycle accumulated mesh distortion. The back-cycle-based mesh moving (BCBMM) method, introduced recently with two versions, can remedy that. In the BCBMM, there is no cycle-to-cycle accumulated distortion. In this article, for the first time, we present mesh moving test computations with the BCBMM. We also introduce a version we call “half-cycle-based mesh moving” (HCBMM) method, and that is for computations where the boundary or interface motion in the second half of the cycle consists of just reversing the steps in the first half and we want the mesh to behave the same way. We present detailed 2D and 3D test computations with finite element meshes, using as the test case the mesh motion associated with wing pitching. The computations show that all versions of the BCBMM perform well, with no cycle-to-cycle accumulated distortion, and with the HCBMM, as the wing in the second half of the cycle just reverses its motion steps in the first half, the mesh behaves the same way.


2021 ◽  
Vol 64 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nan Duan ◽  
Sida Lin ◽  
Yuhu Wu ◽  
Xi-Ming Sun ◽  
Chongquan Zhong

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