INVESTIGADORES
FACHINOTTI Victor Daniel
artículos
Título:
A plausible extension of standard penalty, streamline upwind and immersed boundary techniques to the improved element-free Galerkin-based solution of incompressible Navier–Stokes equations
Autor/es:
ÁLVAREZ HOSTOS, JUAN C.; CRUCHAGA, MARCELA A.; FACHINOTTI, VÍCTOR D.; ZAMBRANO CARRILLO, JAVIER A.; ZAMORA, ESTEBAN
Revista:
COMPUTER METHODS IN APPLIED MECHANICS AND ENGINEERING
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 372
ISSN:
0045-7825
Resumen:
The present work has been conducted in order to propose the extension of standard penalty and stabilization techniques to the improved element-free Galerkin (IEFG) method, for the numerical solution of incompressible fluid flow problems. In principle, the numerical procedures to be implemented in this communication have been conceived for finite element method (FEM)-based solutions, and these include the reduced integration penalty method (RIPM), the streamline upwind Petrov?Galerkin (SUPG) scheme, and a penalty-based immersed boundary method (PBIBM) for the imposition of essential boundary conditions along internal fluid?solid interfaces. The linear momentum balance and mass conservation equations have been coupled via the RIPM, in order to obtain a global weak formulation where the IEFG model is entirely developed in terms of improved moving least squares (IMLS) approximations of the velocity field. A detailed explanation concerning the appropriate extension of both the RIPM and SUPG procedures to the context of IEFG formulations, has also been provided. The resulting formulation has been applied to the solution of two well-known benchmark problems: i) Lid-driven square cavity flow, and ii) Flow past a fixed cylinder. Regarding the flow past a fixed cylinder benchmark problem, the fluid?solid interaction has been imposed as an internal immersed boundary condition via the PBIBM. The feasibility and reliability of implementing the RIPM, SUPG and PBIBM procedures in the IEFG formulation, have been proven by comparison with experimental and mesh-based numerical results reported in the literature. The results obtained in this study have revealed that a proper extension of the aforementioned penalty and stabilization techniques to the IEFG formulation, allows the achievement of accurate and stable numerical results during the solution of incompressible fluid-dynamics problems.