Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies
This work numerically evaluates the role of advancing velocity on the water entry of rigid wedges, highlighting its influence on the development of underpressure at the fluid–structure interface, which can eventually lead to fluid detachment or cavity formation, depending on the geometry. A coupled...
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doaj-a16d9cc196fb4f54ac1de1b5798c57d52021-02-26T00:03:27ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-02-01112029202910.3390/app11052029Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid BodiesRiccardo Panciroli0Giangiacomo Minak1Niccolò Cusano University, Engineering Faculty, 00166 Rome, ItalyDIN Department, Alma Mater Studiorum—Università di Bologna, 40126 Bologna, ItalyThis work numerically evaluates the role of advancing velocity on the water entry of rigid wedges, highlighting its influence on the development of underpressure at the fluid–structure interface, which can eventually lead to fluid detachment or cavity formation, depending on the geometry. A coupled FEM–SPH numerical model is implemented within LS-DYNA, and three types of asymmetric impacts are treated: (I) symmetric wedges with horizontal velocity component, (II) asymmetric wedges with a pure vertical velocity component, and (III) asymmetric wedges with a horizontal velocity component. Particular attention is given to the evolution of the pressure at the fluid–structure interface and the onset of fluid detachment at the wedge tip and their effect on the rigid body dynamics. Results concerning the tilting moment generated during the water entry are presented, varying entry depth, asymmetry, and entry velocity. The presented results are important for the evaluation of the stability of the body during asymmetric slamming events.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/5/2029slammingfluid-structure interactionfluid detachmentcavitation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Riccardo Panciroli Giangiacomo Minak |
spellingShingle |
Riccardo Panciroli Giangiacomo Minak Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies Applied Sciences slamming fluid-structure interaction fluid detachment cavitation |
author_facet |
Riccardo Panciroli Giangiacomo Minak |
author_sort |
Riccardo Panciroli |
title |
Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies |
title_short |
Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies |
title_full |
Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies |
title_fullStr |
Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cavity Formation during Asymmetric Water Entry of Rigid Bodies |
title_sort |
cavity formation during asymmetric water entry of rigid bodies |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Applied Sciences |
issn |
2076-3417 |
publishDate |
2021-02-01 |
description |
This work numerically evaluates the role of advancing velocity on the water entry of rigid wedges, highlighting its influence on the development of underpressure at the fluid–structure interface, which can eventually lead to fluid detachment or cavity formation, depending on the geometry. A coupled FEM–SPH numerical model is implemented within LS-DYNA, and three types of asymmetric impacts are treated: (I) symmetric wedges with horizontal velocity component, (II) asymmetric wedges with a pure vertical velocity component, and (III) asymmetric wedges with a horizontal velocity component. Particular attention is given to the evolution of the pressure at the fluid–structure interface and the onset of fluid detachment at the wedge tip and their effect on the rigid body dynamics. Results concerning the tilting moment generated during the water entry are presented, varying entry depth, asymmetry, and entry velocity. The presented results are important for the evaluation of the stability of the body during asymmetric slamming events. |
topic |
slamming fluid-structure interaction fluid detachment cavitation |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/5/2029 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT riccardopanciroli cavityformationduringasymmetricwaterentryofrigidbodies AT giangiacomominak cavityformationduringasymmetricwaterentryofrigidbodies |
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1724250394515734528 |