• Title/Summary/Keyword: Fluid mechanics

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Biomedical Engineering Research on Circulatory Disorders

  • Yoo Jung-Yul;Park, Jae-Hyung;Suh Sang-Ho;Shim Eun-Bo;Rhee Kye-Han;Shin, Se-Hyun;Cho, Young-I.;Kim, C. Sean;Roh, Hyung-Woon
    • International Journal of Vascular Biomedical Engineering
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.1-10
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    • 2004
  • Circulatory disease is the number two cause of death next to cancer in Korea, while the cardiovascular disease alone is the number one cause of death in the US. In the present article, some background, current status and future prospects of biomedical engineering esearch on circulatory disorders are discussed in terms of the origin of atherosclerosis, computational fluid dynamics and medical imaging techniques, clinical treatments and fluid dynamics, advances in stents, hemodynamic analysis of artificial heart, and artificial blood. In particular, the importance of close collaboration of medicine and fluids engineering is emphasized.

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Investigation of a fiber reinforced polymer composite tube by two way coupling fluid-structure interaction

  • Daricik, Fatih;Canbolat, Gokhan;Koru, Murat
    • Coupled systems mechanics
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.315-333
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    • 2022
  • Fluid-Structure Interaction (FSI) modeling is highly effective to reveal deformations, fatigue failures, and stresses on a solid domain caused by the fluid flow. Mechanical properties of the solid structures and the thermophysical properties of fluids can change under different operating conditions. In this study, we investigated the interaction of [45/-45]2 wounded composite tubes with the fluid flows suddenly pressurized to 5 Bar, 10 Bar, and 15 Bar at the ambient temperatures of 24℃, 66℃, and 82℃, respectively. Numerical analyzes were performed under each temperature and pressure condition and the results were compared depending on the time in a period and along the length of the tube. The main purpose of this study is to present the effects of the variations in fluid characteristics by temperature and pressure on the structural response. The variation of the thermophysical properties of the fluid directly affects the deformation and stress in the material due to the Wall Shear Stress (WSS) generated by the fluid flow. The increase or decrease in WSS directly affected the deformations. Results show that the increase in deformation is more than 50% between 5 Bar and 10 Bar for the same operating condition and it is more than 100% between 5 Bar and 15 Bar by the increase in pressure, as expected in terms of the solid mechanics. In the case of the increase in the temperature of fluid and ambient, the WSS and Von Mises stress decrease while the slight increases of deformations take place on the tube. On the other hand, two-way FSI modeling is needed to observe the effects of hydraulic shock and developing flow on the structural response of composite tubes.

Natural vibration analysis of coaxial shells coupled with fluid

  • Jhung, Myung Jo;Choi, Young Hwan;Jeong, Kyeong Hoon
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.16 no.6
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    • pp.655-674
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    • 2003
  • Investigated in this study are the natural vibration characteristics of the coaxial cylindrical shells coupled with a fluid. Theoretical method is developed to find the natural frequencies of the shell using the finite Fourier series expansion, and their results are compared with those of finite element method to verify the validation of the method developed. The effect of the fluid-filled annulus and the boundary conditions on the modal characteristics of the coaxial shells is investigated using a finite element modeling.

Polypropylene fiber reinforced concrete plates under fluid impact. Part II: modeling and simulation

  • Korucu, Hasan
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.60 no.2
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    • pp.225-235
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    • 2016
  • Fluid impact tests on plates containing mesh reinforcement and polypropylene fibers were modeled and simulated using explicit finite element analysis software, LS-DYNA. The scabbing dimensions obtained by the experiments and the simulations were compared and crack formations were matched. The objective was to test the accuracy and fidelity of the model and to confirm that damage caused by fluid impact on the plates can be estimated with a reasonable accuracy over a wide range of impact velocity.

An efficient three-dimensional fluid hyper-element for dynamic analysis of concrete arch dams

  • Lotfi, Vahid
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.24 no.6
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    • pp.683-698
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    • 2006
  • The accurate dynamic analysis of concrete arch dams relies heavily on employing a three-dimensional semi-infinite fluid element. The usual method for calculating the impedance matrix of this fluid hyper-element is dependent on the solution of a complex eigen-value problem for each frequency. In the present study, an efficient procedure is proposed which simplifies this procedure amazingly, and results in great computational time saving. Moreover, the accuracy of this technique is examined thoroughly and it is concluded that efficient procedure is incredibly accurate under all practical conditions.

Identification of Aerodynamic Model CFD-Based for Gust Response Analysis

  • Nie, Xueyuan;Yang, Guowei
    • International Journal of Aerospace System Engineering
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.43-46
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    • 2015
  • Aeroelastic gust response analysis plays an important role in design of aircrafts. For gust response analysis, frequency domain aerodynamics method has been typically used with generalized aerodynamic influence coefficient matrices at various reduced frequencies. However, it cannot be applied to the aeroservoelastic analysis, such as gust alleviation control. Time-domain state space (SS) models must be built. It attacks little attention that gust response analysis relies on continuous gust time-domain input signal in terms of its PSD function. The aim the current study is to provide a reduced-order modeling (ROM) method based on CFD to model gust responses for continuous gust responses for continuou gust inputs in time domain. The paper analyzed the gust response of AGARD445.6 wing subjected to the Dryden gust with ROMs and compared the difference between the rigid structure and elastic one. The results demonstrate that structure elastic effect effect should be considered in the design of aircraft.

Numerical and experimental study on the scale effect of internal solitary wave loads on spar platforms

  • Wang, Xu;Zhou, Ji-Fu
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.569-577
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    • 2020
  • Based on laboratory experiments and numerical simulations, the scale effect of Internal Solitary Wave (ISW) loads on spar platforms is investigated. First, the waveforms, loads, and torques on the spar model at a laboratory obtained by the experiments and simulations agree well with each other. Then, a prototype spar platform is simulated numerically to elucidate the scale effect. The scale effect for the horizontal forces is significant owing to the viscosity effect, whereas it is insignificant and can be neglected for the vertical forces. From the similarity point of view, the Froude number was the same for the scaled model and its prototype, while the Reynolds number increased significantly. The results show that the Morison equation with the same set of drag and inertia coefficients is not applicable to estimate the ISW loads for both the prototype and laboratory scale model. The coefficients should be modified to account for the scale effect. In conclusion, the dimensionless vertical forces on experimental models can be applied to the prototype, but the dimensionless horizontal forces of the experimental model are larger than those of the prototype, which will lead to overestimation of the horizontal force of the prototype if direct conversion is implemented.

Special Issue on computational methods in engineering (CILAMCE 2018 - Paris/Compiegne)

  • Ibrahimbegovic, Adnan;Pimenta, Paulo M.
    • Coupled systems mechanics
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.95-98
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    • 2019
  • This special issue contains selected papers first presented in a short format at the Congress CILAMCE 2018 ($39^{th}$ Ibero-Latin American Congress on Computational Methods in Engineering) held in Paris and in $Compi{\grave{e}}gne$, France, from 11 to 14 November 2018.

Hydrodynamic pressures acting on the walls of rectangular fluid containers

  • Dogangun, Adem;Livaoglu, Ramazan
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.203-214
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    • 2004
  • The dynamic response characteristics of a rectangular fluid container are investigated by using finite element method. The fluid is assumed to be linear-elastic, inviscid and compressible. A displacement-based fluid finite element was employed to allow for the effects of the fluid. A typical rectangular fluid container, which is used in recent studies, is considered for the numerical analysis. The North-South component of El Centro Earthquake records is used as input ground acceleration. Rigid and flexible fluid containers solutions are obtained for the chosen sample tank. Hydrodynamic pressures and sloshing motions are determined using Lagrangian fluid finite element. The results obtained from this study are compared with the results obtained by boundary-finite element method (BEM-FEM) and requirements of Eurocode-8. Based on the numerical analysis, some conclusions and discussions on the design considerations for rectangular fluid containers are presented.