Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction

The immersed boundary method has attracted considerable interest in the last few years. The method is a computational cheap alternative to represent the boundaries of a geometrically complex body, while using a cartesian mesh, by adding a force term in the momentum equation. The advantage of this is...

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Main Authors: Jonatas E. Borges, Marcos Lourenço, Elie L. M. Padilla, Christopher Micallef
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-09-01
Series:Computation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2079-3197/6/3/50
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spelling doaj-3f5d712cdcce4167a17b77ad261380472020-11-25T00:41:57ZengMDPI AGComputation2079-31972018-09-01635010.3390/computation6030050computation6030050Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden ContractionJonatas E. Borges0Marcos Lourenço1Elie L. M. Padilla2Christopher Micallef3School of Food Engineering, Federal University of Mato Grosso, Cuiabá 78600-000, BrazilSchool of Mechanical Engineering, Technologic Federal University of Parana, Apucarana 86300-000, BrazilSchool of Mechanical Engineering, Federal University of Uberlândia, Uberlândia 38400-902, BrazilDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of Malta, Msida, MSD 2080, MaltaThe immersed boundary method has attracted considerable interest in the last few years. The method is a computational cheap alternative to represent the boundaries of a geometrically complex body, while using a cartesian mesh, by adding a force term in the momentum equation. The advantage of this is that bodies of any arbitrary shape can be added without grid restructuring, a procedure which is often time-consuming. Furthermore, multiple bodies may be simulated, and relative motion of those bodies may be accomplished at reasonable computational cost. The numerical platform in development has a parallel distributed-memory implementation to solve the Navier-Stokes equations. The Finite Volume Method is used in the spatial discretization where the diffusive terms are approximated by the central difference method. The temporal discretization is accomplished using the Adams-Bashforth method. Both temporal and spatial discretizations are second-order accurate. The Velocity-pressure coupling is done using the fractional-step method of two steps. The present work applies the immersed boundary method to simulate a Newtonian laminar flow through a three-dimensional sudden contraction. Results are compared to published literature. Flow patterns upstream and downstream of the contraction region are analysed at various Reynolds number in the range 44 ≤ R e D ≤ 993 for the large tube and 87 ≤ R e D ≤ 1956 for the small tube, considerating a contraction ratio of β = 1.97 . Comparison between numerical and experimental velocity profiles has shown good agreement.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-3197/6/3/50computational fluid dynamicsimmersed boundary methodsudden contraction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonatas E. Borges
Marcos Lourenço
Elie L. M. Padilla
Christopher Micallef
spellingShingle Jonatas E. Borges
Marcos Lourenço
Elie L. M. Padilla
Christopher Micallef
Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction
Computation
computational fluid dynamics
immersed boundary method
sudden contraction
author_facet Jonatas E. Borges
Marcos Lourenço
Elie L. M. Padilla
Christopher Micallef
author_sort Jonatas E. Borges
title Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction
title_short Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction
title_full Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction
title_fullStr Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction
title_full_unstemmed Immersed Boundary Method Application as a Way to Deal with the Three-Dimensional Sudden Contraction
title_sort immersed boundary method application as a way to deal with the three-dimensional sudden contraction
publisher MDPI AG
series Computation
issn 2079-3197
publishDate 2018-09-01
description The immersed boundary method has attracted considerable interest in the last few years. The method is a computational cheap alternative to represent the boundaries of a geometrically complex body, while using a cartesian mesh, by adding a force term in the momentum equation. The advantage of this is that bodies of any arbitrary shape can be added without grid restructuring, a procedure which is often time-consuming. Furthermore, multiple bodies may be simulated, and relative motion of those bodies may be accomplished at reasonable computational cost. The numerical platform in development has a parallel distributed-memory implementation to solve the Navier-Stokes equations. The Finite Volume Method is used in the spatial discretization where the diffusive terms are approximated by the central difference method. The temporal discretization is accomplished using the Adams-Bashforth method. Both temporal and spatial discretizations are second-order accurate. The Velocity-pressure coupling is done using the fractional-step method of two steps. The present work applies the immersed boundary method to simulate a Newtonian laminar flow through a three-dimensional sudden contraction. Results are compared to published literature. Flow patterns upstream and downstream of the contraction region are analysed at various Reynolds number in the range 44 ≤ R e D ≤ 993 for the large tube and 87 ≤ R e D ≤ 1956 for the small tube, considerating a contraction ratio of β = 1.97 . Comparison between numerical and experimental velocity profiles has shown good agreement.
topic computational fluid dynamics
immersed boundary method
sudden contraction
url http://www.mdpi.com/2079-3197/6/3/50
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