Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 24 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Effect of a Linear Free Surface Boundary Condition on the Steady-State Wave-Making of Shallowly Submerged Underwater Vehicles

William Lambert    
Stefano Brizzolara and Craig Woolsey    

Resumen

Near-surface simulation methods for shallowly submerged underwater vehicles are necessary for the population of a variety of free-surface-affected, coefficient-based maneuvering and seakeeping models. Simulations vary in complexity and computational costs, often sacrificing accuracy for simplicity and speed. One particular simplifying assumption, the linearization of the free surface boundary conditions, is explored in this study by comparing the steady-state wave-making characteristics of a shallowly submerged prolate spheroid using two different simulation methods at several submergence depths and forward speeds. Hydrodynamic responses are compared between a time-domain boundary element method that makes use of a linearized free surface boundary condition and an inviscid, volume of fluid Reynolds-Averaged Navier?Stokes computational fluid dynamics code that imposes no explicit free surface boundary condition. Differences of up to 22.6%, 32.5%, and 33.3% are found in the prediction of steady state surge force, heave force, and pitch moment, respectively. The largest differences between the two simulation methods arise for motions occurring at small submergences and large wave-making velocities where linear free-surface assumptions become less valid. Nonlinearities that occur in such cases are revealed through physical artifacts such as wave steepening, wave breaking, and high-energy waves. A further examination of near-surface viscous forces reveals that the viscous drag on the vessel is depth dependent due to the changing velocity profile around the body.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Zhao Ma, Junjie Ye, Xin Zhang and Wenhua Ye    
To analyze the rock-breaking characteristics of an arcing-blade cutter in cutting red sandstone, a two-cutter cutting model was established based on the finite element method. Then, the cutting processes of the arcing-blade cutter at penetrations of 2 mm... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Cesare Patuelli, Enrico Cestino and Giacomo Frulla    
Vibration analysis of wing-box structures is a crucial aspect of the aeronautic design to avoid aeroelastic effects during normal flight operations. The deformation of a wing structure can induce nonlinear couplings, causing a different dynamic behavior ... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Bingbing Wan, Yuyun Shi and Zhifu Li    
The interaction problem of waves with a body floating near the marginal ice zone is studied, where the marginal ice zone is modeled as an array of multiple uniformly sized floating ice sheets. The linear velocity potential theory is applied for fluid flo... ver más

 
Jian Qin, Zhenquan Zhang, Xuening Song, Shuting Huang, Yanjun Liu and Gang Xue    
In order to enhance the power generation efficiency and reliability of wave energy converters (WECs), an enclosed inertial WEC with a magnetic nonlinear stiffness mechanism (nonlinear EIWEC) is proposed in this paper. A mathematical model of the nonlinea... ver más

 
Huan Yang, Xili Jing, Zhiyong Yin, Shuoyu Chen and Chun Wang    
Photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is an emerging imaging technique with great potential for a wide range of biomedical imaging applications. The transducers impulse response (TIR) is a key factor affecting the performance of photoacoustic imaging (PAI). It ... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences