A study of the compatibility of an existing CFD package with a broader class of material constitutions
Abstract
The flexibility of the PHOENICS computational fluid dynamics package was assessed along two general avenues; parallel modeling and analog modeling. In parallel modeling the dependent and independent variables retain their identity within some scaling factors, even though the boundary conditions and especially the constitutive relations do not correspond to any realistic fluid dynamic situation. PHOENICS was used to generate a CFD model that should exhibit the physical anomalies of a granular medium and permit reasonable similarity with boundary conditions typical to membrane or porous piston loading. A considerable portion of the study was spent prying into the existing code with a prejudice toward rate type and disarming any inherent fluid behavior. The final stages of the study were directed at the more specific problem of multiaxis loading of cylindrical geometry with a concern for the appearance of bulging, cross slab shear failure modes.
- Publication:
-
In Alabama Univ. Res. Rept.: 1984 NASA/ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program (NASA-CR-171317) 21 p (SEE N85-22210 12-80
- Pub Date:
- January 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985asee.nasa.....F
- Keywords:
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- Computer Programs;
- Fluid Dynamics;
- Perturbation;
- Solids;
- Stress Analysis;
- Stress-Strain Relationships;
- Continuum Mechanics;
- Failure Analysis;
- Independent Variables;
- Loads (Forces);
- Numerical Analysis;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer