用于 FSI 的体积自适应无网格模型模拟气泡塌陷的空化侵蚀

IF 2.8 3区 工程技术 Q1 MATHEMATICS, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS Computational Particle Mechanics Pub Date : 2024-08-31 DOI:10.1007/s40571-024-00815-x
Qiang Zhang, Xin Liu, Xiangwei Dong, Li Yin, Zhou Cheng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气蚀是液压机械和海洋工程中普遍存在的问题,其特点是气泡坍塌、微喷射和冲击侵蚀,所有这些都表现出强烈的瞬态、微尺度和流固耦合特征。了解这些现象对于阐明侵蚀背后的机理和制定防止磨损的策略至关重要。认识到传统数值方法的局限性,本研究采用平滑粒子流体力学(SPH)方法开发了一种流固耦合模型,模拟气泡尺度的空化侵蚀。SPH 的拉格朗日和无网格特性使其非常适合跟踪不对称气泡坍塌、喷流形成的瞬态过程,以及随后对弹塑性材料的影响。我们构建了一个全面的流固耦合 SPH 模型,包括气泡、周围液体和弹塑性材料。该模型包括一种可压缩多相 SPH 方法,用于模拟高可压缩性气泡和液体之间的相互作用。为了解决气泡坍塌时气相过度压缩的问题,引入了改进的粒子再生技术(PRT),允许在气泡膨胀或压缩时自动调整气域中粒子的分辨率。在固体模拟方面,SPH 框架中集成了弹塑性构成模型和失效模型,用于描述微射流冲击引起的材料变形和失效。这些改进使得整个空化侵蚀过程可以在统一的无网格环境下进行模拟。通过模拟冲击波引起的气泡坍塌和喷射,SPH 模型得到了验证。然后将其应用于研究刚性和弹塑性材料附近的空化侵蚀动力学,提供侵蚀过程的定量分析。这项研究的成果极大地促进了我们对空化侵蚀机制的理解,并为预测和减轻相关工程应用中的侵蚀破坏提供了强大的计算工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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A volume-adaptive mesh-free model for FSI Simulation of cavitation erosion with bubble collapse

Cavitation erosion is a pervasive issue in hydraulic machinery and ocean engineering, characterized by the collapse of bubbles, micro-jetting, and impact erosion, all exhibiting strong transient, microscale, and fluid–solid coupling features. Understanding these phenomena is essential for elucidating the mechanisms behind erosion and for developing strategies to prevent wear damage. Recognizing the limitations of conventional numerical methods, this study employs the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) method to develop a fluid–solid coupling model that simulates cavitation erosion at the bubble scale. The Lagrangian and mesh-free nature of SPH make it well-suited for tracking the transient processes of asymmetric bubble collapse, jet formation, and the subsequent impact on elastic–plastic materials. A comprehensive fluid–solid coupling SPH model is constructed, encompassing bubbles, surrounding liquids, and elastic–plastic materials. This model includes a compressible multiphase SPH approach for simulating the interaction between highly compressible bubbles and liquids. To address gas phase over-compression during bubble collapse, a modified particle regeneration technique (PRT) is introduced, allowing for automatic adjustment of particle resolution in the gas domain as it expands or compresses. For the solid simulation, an elasto-plastic constitutive model and a failure model are integrated into the SPH framework to describe material deformation and failure due to microjet impacts. These enhancements enable the simulation of the entire cavitation erosion process within a unified, mesh-free context. The SPH model is validated through simulating bubble collapse and jetting induced by shock waves. It is then applied to investigate the dynamics of cavitation erosion near both rigid and elastic–plastic materials, providing quantitative analysis of the erosion process. The outcomes of this research contribute significantly to our understanding of cavitation erosion mechanisms and offer a robust computational tool for predicting and mitigating erosion damage in related engineering applications.

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来源期刊
Computational Particle Mechanics
Computational Particle Mechanics Mathematics-Computational Mathematics
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
75
期刊介绍: GENERAL OBJECTIVES: Computational Particle Mechanics (CPM) is a quarterly journal with the goal of publishing full-length original articles addressing the modeling and simulation of systems involving particles and particle methods. The goal is to enhance communication among researchers in the applied sciences who use "particles'''' in one form or another in their research. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES: Particle-based materials and numerical methods have become wide-spread in the natural and applied sciences, engineering, biology. The term "particle methods/mechanics'''' has now come to imply several different things to researchers in the 21st century, including: (a) Particles as a physical unit in granular media, particulate flows, plasmas, swarms, etc., (b) Particles representing material phases in continua at the meso-, micro-and nano-scale and (c) Particles as a discretization unit in continua and discontinua in numerical methods such as Discrete Element Methods (DEM), Particle Finite Element Methods (PFEM), Molecular Dynamics (MD), and Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH), to name a few.
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