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Structure vibrating in a fluid, simplified model based on the added mass (preliminary)
Posted 11 avr. 2011, 03:54 UTC−4 Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), Structural Mechanics Version 4.1 1 Reply
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I have seen many threads on modal analysis of structures in a fluid. It's a complex task, but I believe one can do quite nice things with only the "structural module" and by applying some hypothesis to simplify the model, and add the liquid effect as Boundary loads.
In the following example (which is NOT YET VERIFIED NOR VALIDATED, be AWARE!)
I have added the effective mass of the liquid
(Y<H0_liq)*rho_liq*solid.d*(solid.nx*u+solid.ny*v)*solid.iomega^2
acting on a cantilever standing vertical half immersed (up to height "Y0_liq" in a fluid of density "rho_liq".
I assume, as essential simplification hypothesis, that the liquid around is wide, and that we are looking for small motion effects.
I have added a few % structural damping to the beam material to improve the bode plots convergence (without the resonances tend to INF
I would appreciate some feedback and if there are some simple validation examples out there ;)
Reference:
Vol3 Modelling of Mechanical Systems Fluid-Structure Interaction of F.Axisa and J. Antuns from B&H Elsevier ISBN 978-0-750-66847-7 (vol 1 and 2 are as good ;)
Next step would be to add some damping from the viscosity of the liquid
Comments & critics appreciated
--
Have fun COMSOLing
Ivar
Attachments:
Hello Ivar KJELBERG
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