Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring

This paper is concerned with liquid sloshing in a partially filled container due to 3-dimensional vehicle motion. The liquid sloshing is described by a set of linear modal equations derived from the potential flow theory, which can be applied to liquid sloshing induced by arbitrary combination of la...

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Main Authors: Mengmeng Han, Jian Dai, C. M. Wang, K. K. Ang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:Shock and Vibration
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6943879
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spelling doaj-c36a6dd0ac1b428cbb18d9b82b9156d32020-11-24T21:34:36ZengHindawi LimitedShock and Vibration1070-96221875-92032019-01-01201910.1155/2019/69438796943879Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular ManoeuvringMengmeng Han0Jian Dai1C. M. Wang2K. K. Ang3School of Civil Engineering, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, AustraliaDepartment of Marine Technology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 7491 Trondheim, NorwaySchool of Civil Engineering, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, AustraliaDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, National University of Singapore, 117576, SingaporeThis paper is concerned with liquid sloshing in a partially filled container due to 3-dimensional vehicle motion. The liquid sloshing is described by a set of linear modal equations derived from the potential flow theory, which can be applied to liquid sloshing induced by arbitrary combination of lateral, longitudinal, and rotational excitations. The sloshing force and moment are expressed with a set of hydrodynamic coefficients that are determined by the linear velocity potential. These coefficients can be precalculated and incorporated into the motion equations of the vehicle system so that a fully coupled vehicle-sloshing model is available. In addition, we propose an approach to calculate the hydrodynamic coefficients using the outputs of commercial frequency-domain boundary element software in order to maximize the efficiency of modelling and computation. The accuracy of the proposed model is examined by comparison with available CFD and model test data in the literature. The case of a road tanker encountering a road bump during acceleration/braking is investigated. Results show that the tank rotational motion will affect the amplitude and the sloshing force, and neglecting tank rotation may lead to underestimation of the sloshing force magnitude.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6943879
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mengmeng Han
Jian Dai
C. M. Wang
K. K. Ang
spellingShingle Mengmeng Han
Jian Dai
C. M. Wang
K. K. Ang
Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring
Shock and Vibration
author_facet Mengmeng Han
Jian Dai
C. M. Wang
K. K. Ang
author_sort Mengmeng Han
title Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring
title_short Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring
title_full Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring
title_fullStr Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring
title_full_unstemmed Hydrodynamic Analysis of Partially Filled Liquid Tanks Subject to 3D Vehicular Manoeuvring
title_sort hydrodynamic analysis of partially filled liquid tanks subject to 3d vehicular manoeuvring
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Shock and Vibration
issn 1070-9622
1875-9203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This paper is concerned with liquid sloshing in a partially filled container due to 3-dimensional vehicle motion. The liquid sloshing is described by a set of linear modal equations derived from the potential flow theory, which can be applied to liquid sloshing induced by arbitrary combination of lateral, longitudinal, and rotational excitations. The sloshing force and moment are expressed with a set of hydrodynamic coefficients that are determined by the linear velocity potential. These coefficients can be precalculated and incorporated into the motion equations of the vehicle system so that a fully coupled vehicle-sloshing model is available. In addition, we propose an approach to calculate the hydrodynamic coefficients using the outputs of commercial frequency-domain boundary element software in order to maximize the efficiency of modelling and computation. The accuracy of the proposed model is examined by comparison with available CFD and model test data in the literature. The case of a road tanker encountering a road bump during acceleration/braking is investigated. Results show that the tank rotational motion will affect the amplitude and the sloshing force, and neglecting tank rotation may lead to underestimation of the sloshing force magnitude.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6943879
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AT cmwang hydrodynamicanalysisofpartiallyfilledliquidtankssubjectto3dvehicularmanoeuvring
AT kkang hydrodynamicanalysisofpartiallyfilledliquidtankssubjectto3dvehicularmanoeuvring
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