A Multisubstructure-Based Method for the Assessment of Displacement and Stress in a Fluid–Structure Interaction Framework
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Craig-Bampton Substructure Method
2.2. Displacement Mapping under Inconformity Interface
- (1)
- Displacement Recursion
- (2)
- Generalized Coordinate Solution
2.3. Interpolation Theory
2.4. Aerodynamic Modeling
3. Structural and Aerodynamic Modeling
3.1. Structural Model
3.2. Load Cases
- (1)
- Load Cases Outside FSI Framework
- (2)
- Aerodynamic Model Inside the FSI Framework
3.3. Calculation Process
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. The Displacement Evaluation of The Coarse Model
- (1)
- The Confidence of Original Displacement Boundary
- (2)
- The Displacement Distribution Inside the Coarse Model
4.2. The Effectiveness of Displacement Assessment
- (1)
- The Adaptivity of Different Positions Inside the Structural Model
- (2)
- The Inner Displacement Precision for Local Fine-meshed Model
4.3. The Effectiveness in Strain Assessment
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- The proposed method can effectively depict the displacement inside the structure. The displacement boundary of the fine-meshed model can be determined via a combination of TPS and eigenvector augmentation inside the last-level substructure. Moreover, the displacement inside the model is assessed by integrating the fixed-interface main mode and the corresponding generalized coordinates based on the principle of minimum potential energy.
- (2)
- The maximum displacement relative error occurs near the constraint boundary, with small displacement and therefore a large relative error, in contrast to the absolute error. The reason is that the displacement error is inherited from the last-level substructure via interpolation sampling. However, this error can be reduced by narrowing the substructure inside, from the top level to the bottom. A more accurate substructure displacement boundary can be determined when it is located inside its last-level substructure because the displacement accuracy of the last-level substructure is improved by adding higher-order shape functions.
- (3)
- The analysis results of different loads and substructure positions highlight the reliability of the method, which only considers the mapping range and location such that the mapping information can be stored and transferred when required. Given the accuracy and efficiency of the proposed method, this study lays a solid foundation for addressing the time-dependent problem in the analysis of fluid–structure interactions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Material Properties | Value |
---|---|
Density/(kg/m3) | 7.85 |
Young’s Module ()/Pa | 2.10 × 108 |
Shear Module ()/Pa | 8.08 × 107 |
Poisson’s Ratio () | 0.3 |
Case | Load Type |
---|---|
1 | Concentration force in a single node |
2 | Evenly distributed force in every node |
3 | Proportionally reduced force in every node |
Case | Flow Speed (m/s) | Angle of Attack (°) |
---|---|---|
4 | 0.5 | 1 |
5 | 1 | 1 |
6 | 1 | 2 |
7 | 2 | 2 |
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Xie, C.; Huang, K.; Meng, Y.; Gao, N.; Zhang, Z. A Multisubstructure-Based Method for the Assessment of Displacement and Stress in a Fluid–Structure Interaction Framework. Aerospace 2024, 11, 423. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060423
Xie C, Huang K, Meng Y, Gao N, Zhang Z. A Multisubstructure-Based Method for the Assessment of Displacement and Stress in a Fluid–Structure Interaction Framework. Aerospace. 2024; 11(6):423. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060423
Chicago/Turabian StyleXie, Changchuan, Kunhui Huang, Yang Meng, Nongyue Gao, and Zhitao Zhang. 2024. "A Multisubstructure-Based Method for the Assessment of Displacement and Stress in a Fluid–Structure Interaction Framework" Aerospace 11, no. 6: 423. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060423
APA StyleXie, C., Huang, K., Meng, Y., Gao, N., & Zhang, Z. (2024). A Multisubstructure-Based Method for the Assessment of Displacement and Stress in a Fluid–Structure Interaction Framework. Aerospace, 11(6), 423. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060423