A computationally efficient 3D finite‐volume scheme for violent liquid–gas sloshing |
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Authors: | O. F. Oxtoby A. G. Malan J. A. Heyns |
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Affiliation: | 1. Aeronautic Systems, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Pretoria, South Africa;2. South African Research Chair in Industrial CFD, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa |
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Abstract: | We describe a semi‐implicit volume‐of‐fluid free‐surface‐modelling methodology for flow problems involving violent free‐surface motion. For efficient computation, a hybrid‐unstructured edge‐based vertex‐centred finite volume discretisation is employed, while the solution methodology is entirely matrix free. Pressures are solved using a matrix‐free preconditioned generalised minimum residual algorithm and explicit time‐stepping is employed for the momentum and interface‐tracking equations. The high resolution artificial compressive (HiRAC) volume‐of‐fluid method is used for accurate capturing of the free surface in violent flow regimes while allowing natural applicability to hybrid‐unstructured meshes. The code is parallelised for solution on distributed‐memory architectures and evaluated against 2D and 3D benchmark problems. Good parallel scaling is demonstrated, with almost linear speed‐up down to 6000 cells per core. Finally, the code is applied to an industrial‐type problem involving resonant excitation of a fuel tank, and a comparison with experimental results is made in this violent sloshing regime. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | finite volume method free‐surface modelling volume of fluid method sloshing surface capturing matrix free parallel computing |
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