• Title of article

    Generalized fictitious methods for fluid–structure interactions: Analysis and simulations

  • Author/Authors

    Yu، نويسنده , , Yue and Baek، نويسنده , , Hyoungsu and Karniadakis، نويسنده , , George Em، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    30
  • From page
    317
  • To page
    346
  • Abstract
    We present a new fictitious pressure method for fluid–structure interaction (FSI) problems in incompressible flow by generalizing the fictitious mass and damping methods we published previously in [1]. The fictitious pressure method involves modification of the fluid solver whereas the fictitious mass and damping methods modify the structure solver. We analyze all fictitious methods for simplified problems and obtain explicit expressions for the optimal reduction factor (convergence rate index) at the FSI interface [2]. This analysis also demonstrates an apparent similarity of fictitious methods to the FSI approach based on Robin boundary conditions, which have been found to be very effective in FSI problems. We implement all methods, including the semi-implicit Robin based coupling method, in the context of spectral element discretization, which is more sensitive to temporal instabilities than low-order methods. However, the methods we present here are simple and general, and hence applicable to FSI based on any other spatial discretization. In numerical tests, we verify the selection of optimal values for the fictitious parameters for simplified problems and for vortex-induced vibrations (VIV) even at zero mass ratio (“for-ever-resonance”). We also develop an empirical a posteriori analysis for complex geometries and apply it to 3D patient-specific flexible brain arteries with aneurysms for very large deformations. We demonstrate that the fictitious pressure method enhances stability and convergence, and is comparable or better in most cases to the Robin approach or the other fictitious methods.
  • Keywords
    FSI , spectral element method , Partitioned method , High-order , Flexible brain arteries , VIV , Patient-specific aneurysm
  • Journal title
    Journal of Computational Physics
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Journal of Computational Physics
  • Record number

    1485540