outflow boundary condition
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (18) ◽  
pp. 8440
Author(s):  
Yanzhao Wang ◽  
Guobin Xu ◽  
Fang Liu

A two-dimensional unsteady fluid–structure interaction numerical model was established, based on the physical model test, to investigate the influence of vertical vibration on the holding force of an emergency gate in the closing process. Gate motion was controlled by the user-defined function in Fluent. Attention was paid to the relationship between the vertical vibration, hydrodynamic loads and flow discharge. The experiment results show that holding force has three typical forms in the closing process and it is related to the service gate height. The numerical model can reflect the gate vertical vibration and the gate-closing displacement in the form of steps. Gate vertical vibration in the closing process is a motion-induced vibration caused by gate active falling. Moreover, the transition from full-flow to open-flow behind the emergency gate has a great influence on the gate vertical vibration. With a small gate opening, gate vertical vibration makes the flow discharge fluctuation increase. Furthermore, flow discharge has an influence on the gate body loads, which is mainly concentrated in the upstream plate and gate bottom. Finally, the lift force coefficient at the gate bottom is different from the standard and is mainly controlled by the outflow boundary condition. The simulation result is in good agreement with the experiment and the relative error meets engineering requirements, suggesting that the numerical model can successfully simulate the gate fluid–structure interaction and reproduce the characteristics of physical quantities in the closing process.


2021 ◽  
Vol 61 (SI) ◽  
pp. 117-121
Author(s):  
Tomáš Neustupa ◽  
Ondřej Winter

This paper studies the artificial outflow boundary condition for the Navier-Stokes system. This type of condition is widely used and it is therefore very important to study its influence on a numerical solution of the corresponding boundary-value problem. We particularly focus on the role of the coefficient in front of the nonlinear term in the boundary condition on the outflow. The influence of this term is examined numerically, comparing the obtained results in a close neighbourhood of the outflow. The numerical experiment is carried out for a fluid flow through the channel with so called sudden extension. Presented numerical results are obtained by means of the OpenFOAM toolbox. They confirm that the kinetic energy of the flow in the channel can be controlled by means of the proposed boundary condition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 727
Author(s):  
Dimitris I. Manolas ◽  
Vasilis A. Riziotis ◽  
Spyros G. Voutsinas

Accurate and efficient numerical wave generation and absorption of two-dimensional nonlinear periodic waves traveling on a steady, uniform current were carried out in a potential, fully nonlinear numerical wave tank. The solver is based on the Βoundary Εlement Μethod (ΒΕΜ) with linear singularity distributions and plane elements and on the mixed Eulerian–Lagrangian formulation of the free surface equations. Wave generation is implemented along the inflow boundary by imposing the stream function wave solution, while wave absorption at both end-boundaries is effectively treated by introducing absorbing layers. On the absorbing beach side, the outflow boundary condition is modified to ensure that the solution accurately satisfies the dispersion relation of the generated waves. The modification involves a free-parameter that depends on the mass flux through the domain and is determined through a feedback error-correction loop. The developed method provides accurate time domain wave solutions for shallow, intermediate, and deep water depths of high wave steepness (wave heights up to 80% of the maximum value) that remain stable for 150 wave periods. This also holds in case a coplanar or opposing uniform current of velocity up to 20% of the wave celerity interacts with the wave.


Author(s):  
Susumu Osaki ◽  
Kosuke Hayashi ◽  
Hidehito Kimura ◽  
Eiji Kohmura ◽  
Akio Tomiyama

Abstract The lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) is used to simulate blood flows in cerebral aneurysms and the effects of the outflow boundary condition on predictions are studied. The LBM utilizes the D3Q19 discrete velocity model, the multiple-relaxation time collision operator (MRT), and the interpolated bounce-back rule to treat complex aneurysm shapes. Flow characteristics in regions of a large fluctuation in the wall shear stress (WSS) were then investigated using the LBM to understand the relation between the flow structure and the aneurysm wall remodeling. As a result the following conclusions were obtained under the present range of the numerical condition: (1) even with significant changes in the flow rate distributions at outflow boundaries, the WSS in an aneurysm is not much affected if the boundaries are far from the aneurysm, and (2) the geometry of an aneurysm and the main artery largely affects the formation of large WSS fluctuation regions, which may thickens the aneurysm wall due to inflammation-induced wall remodeling.


Fluids ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seema Paul ◽  
Jesper Oppelstrup ◽  
Roger Thunvik ◽  
John Mango Magero ◽  
David Ddumba Walakira ◽  
...  

This study explored two-dimensional (2D) numerical hydrodynamic model simulations of Lake Victoria. Several methods were developed in Matlab to build the lake topography. Old depth soundings taken in smaller parts of the lake were combined with more recent extensive data to produce a smooth topographical model. The lake free surface numerical model in the COMSOL Multiphysics (CM) software was implemented using bathymetry and vertically integrated 2D shallow water equations. Validated by measurements of mean lake water level, the model predicted very low mean flow speeds and was thus close to being linear and time invariant, allowing long-time simulations with low-pass filtered inflow data. An outflow boundary condition allowed an accurate simulation to achieve the lake’s steady state level. The numerical accuracy of the linear measurement of lake water level was excellent.


Author(s):  
Nakyeong Seo ◽  
Nabil Kharoua ◽  
Lyes Khezzar ◽  
Mohamed Alshehhi ◽  
Mahmoud Meribout

Abstract The present study addresses itself to the performance assessment of a novel in-line gas-liquid separator. The separator is developed by FRAMES company under the name of SwirlSep based on the interaction of a swirling flow, generated by an innovative devise called swirl cage, and a hollow conical bluff body designed to deviate the gaseous phase internally.. The separator is intended to be implemented within a multiphase flow metering system in oil field gathering stations in the Gulf region. The study represents a preliminary step among a design process including elaborate lab-scale and filed tests. The flow in the gas-liquid separator is studied using Computational Fluid Dynamics CFD. The Shear Stress Transport (SST) k-ω turbulence and Eulerian-Eulerian multiphase models, under different flow conditions, were used to simulate real flow scenarios. The scenarios were chosen to replicate flow conditions that could exist during the operation of oil wells over their lifetime with the aim to provide guidance for proper control of the separator valves. The fraction of the total flow is prescribed at each outlet, using an outflow boundary condition, to mimic the action of the control valves. At the inlet, the phase velocity and volume fraction were prescribed. The outlet streams and their phase’s content were, then, analyzed together with the distribution of the velocity and concentration fields inside the separator. Velocity and pressure drop were found to increase with the increase of the outflow in one outlet when changing the flow split. Flow control, at the outlets, caused an increase of the oil-in-gas entrainment when trying to minimize gas-in-oil entrainment which is a non-trivial task. The effects of the flow split specified appeared downstream of the conical bluff body only when the inflow conditions were kept constant whereas the flow field remained identical upstream of the cone. A recirculation zone was generated in the annular space downstream of the cone and affected the separator performance considerably. The recirculation zone was due to the effect of the higher flow rate towards the gas outlet and disappeared when the flow rate towards the oil outlet tended to be equal or higher. The phase distribution was identical upstream of the cone and depended on the flow split downstream of the cone. The cases considered served as an assessment of the separator performance under different multiphase flow conditions replicating realistic scenarios.


Author(s):  
Jong Chull Jo ◽  
Jae Jun Jeong ◽  
Byong Jo Yun ◽  
Frederick J. Moody

Transient fluid velocity and pressure fields in a pressurized water reactor (PWR) steam generator (SG) secondary side during the blowdown period of a feedwater line break (FWLB) accident were numerically simulated employing the saturated liquid flashing model. This model is based on the assumption that compressed water in the SG is saturated at the beginning and decompresses into the two-phase region where saturated vapor forms, creating a mixture of steam bubbles in liquid by bulk boiling. The numerical calculations were performed for two cases where the outflow boundary condition is different from each other; one is specified as the direct blowdown discharge to atmospheric pressure and the other is specified as the blowdown discharge to an extended calculation domain with atmospheric pressure on its boundary. To effectively simulate the saturated water flashing from the SG following the FWLB accident, the physical SG model was simplified as a vertical once-through SG to which a feedwater pipe is attached. However, the physical geometry of the analysis model was modeled as realistically as possible in terms of the SG tube bundle height, the SG inner diameter and porosity, the inner diameter and length of broken feedwater pipe part, etc. It was considered that the SG shell-side and the attached feedwater pipe were initially filled with high pressure saturated water. The pressure in the steam space was 7.5 MPa. For the calculation of the two-phase flow during high pressure saturated water flashing from the SG through the broken feedwater pipe, the inhomogeneous two-fluid model was used. The present simulation results were discussed through a comparison with the predictions using a simple non-flashing model neglecting the effects of phase change. Based on the comparative discussions, the applicability of each of the non-flashing liquid discharge and saturated liquid flashing discharge models to the confirmatory safety evaluations of new SG designs was examined.


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