Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
The hydroelastic interaction between an underwater
explosion and an elastic plate is investigated numerically
through a domain-decomposition strategy.
The three-dimensional features of the problem require
a large computational effort,which is reduced through
a weak coupling between a one-dimensional radial
blast solver, which resolves the blast evolution
far from the boundaries, and a three-dimensional
compressible flow solver used where the interactions
between the compression wave and the boundaries
take place and the flow becomes three-dimensional.
The three-dimensional flow solver at the boundaries
is directly coupled with a modal structural solver
that models the response of the solid boundaries
like elastic plates. This enables one to simulate the
fluid-structure interaction as a strong coupling, in
order to capture hydroelastic effects. The method has
been applied to the experimental case of Hung et al.
(2005 Int. J. Impact Eng. 31, 151-168 (doi:10.1016/
j.ijimpeng.2003.10.039)) with explosion and structure
sufficiently far from other boundaries and successfully
validated in terms of the evolution of the acceleration
induced on the plate. It was also used to investigate
the interaction of an underwater explosion with the
bottom of a close-by ship modelled as an orthotropic
plate. In the application, the acoustic phase of the
fluid-structure interaction is examined, highlighting
the need of the fluid-structure coupling to capture
correctly the possible inception of cavitation.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
underwater explosion; compressible two-phase flow; hydroelastic fluid-structure coupling; domain decomposition
List of contributors: