Numerical simulation of airflow and airborne pathogen transport in aircraft cabins: Dynamic Mesh Analyses

Author(s):  
Essam E. Khalil ◽  
Hassan Kotb
Author(s):  
Yanji Wei ◽  
Ashkan Rafiee ◽  
Bjoern Elsaesser ◽  
Frederic Dias

It has been known that bottom hinged Oscillating Wave Surge Converters (OWSCs) are an efficient way of extracting power from ocean waves (Whittaker et al. 2007). OWSCs are in general large buoyant flaps, hinged at the bottom of the ocean and oscillating back and forth under the action of incoming incident waves (Schmitt et al. 2012, Renzi and Dias 2012). The oscillating motion is then converted into energy by pumping high-pressure water to drive a hydro–electric turbine. This paper deals with numerical studies of wave loading on an OWSC using the FLUENT software. In numerical simulation of wave loading on an OWSC using mesh-based methods, the mesh around the flap is required to be updated frequently. This is due to the large amplitude rotation of the OWSC around the hinge. In this work, the remeshing was achieved by using the so-called dynamic mesh approach built in FLUENT. Furthermore, the motion of the OWSC is updated in time using a fourth order multi point time integration scheme coupled with the flow solver. The results for the flap motion and the excited torque on the hinged position were compared with experimental data obtained in a wave tank at Queen’s University of Belfast. The results showed the capability of the numerical model with a dynamic mesh approach in modeling large amplitude motions of the flap. In addition, the pressures at various locations on the flap were compared with the experimental measurements in order to demonstrate the accuracy of the proposed model in capturing local features of the flow as well as the global features.


Author(s):  
Peter R. Forsyth ◽  
David R.H. Gillespie ◽  
Matthew McGilvray

The presence and accretion of airborne particulates, including ash, sand, dust, and other compounds, in gas turbine engines can adversely affect performance and life of components. Engine experience and experimental work have shown that the thickness of accreted layers of these particulates can become large relative to the engine components on which they form. Numerical simulation to date has largely ignored the effects of resultant changes in the passage geometry due to the build-up of deposited particles. This paper will focus on updating the boundaries of the flow volume geometry by integrating the deposited volume of particulates on the solid surface. The technique is implemented using a novel, coupled deposition-dynamic mesh morphing (DMM) approach to the simulation of particulate-laden flows using Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes modeling of the bulk fluid, and Lagrangian-based particulate tracking. On an iterative basis, the particle deposition distributions are used to modify the surface topology by altering the locations of surface nodes, which modifies the mesh. The continuous phase solution and particle tracking are then recalculated. The sensitivity to the modeling time steps employed is explored. An impingement geometry case is used to assess the validity of the technique, and a passage with film cooling holes is interrogated. Differences are seen for all sticking and solid phase motion models employed. At small solid particle sizes, considerable disparity is observed between the particle motion modeling approaches, while the position and level of accretion is altered through the use of a nonisotropic stick and bounce model.


2011 ◽  
Vol 250-253 ◽  
pp. 3811-3814
Author(s):  
Cheng Hsin Chang ◽  
Jen Mu Wang ◽  
Chii Ming Cheng

This paper investigated the structural responses of the wind turbine due to wind loads by performing the wind tunnel test and the Computational Fluid Dynamics, (CFD). The base shear force and the base moment of the wind turbine measured by the wind tunnel test were compared with the numerical simulation results. Both the numerical dynamic mesh and sliding mesh models were selected for the numerical simulations. The results showed that the dynamic mesh model was better than the sliding model by comparing to the wind tunnel test result. In the case of the k-epsilon RNG turbulence model, the prediction of the bending moment affecting by acrossswind was more than 50%, and the prediction of the force affecting by acrosswind was less than 3%. The both simulation results of the prototype and the full scale wind turbine were obtained by CFD model. The comparisons of the result showed that the error of Fxwas about 15% and Mywas about 13.5%.


2012 ◽  
Vol 152-154 ◽  
pp. 266-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Tao Ding ◽  
Ru Qing Liu ◽  
Ri Na Su

Based on standard k-ε turbulent, PISO algorithm and the dynamic mesh model, numerical simulation of the 3D, viscous, unsteady compressible gas synthetic jet model was proposed. Two kinds of diaphragm boundary conditions, Helmholtz frequency characteristics and other factors affecting the performance of the 3D synthetic jet were discussed. Simulation results show that the dynamic mesh diaphragm boundary condition is more consistent with the experimental results and the theoretical results, which demonstrates the rationality of the dynamic mesh 3D compressible gas model.


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