In the present paper, a Vortex Particle Method is combined with a Boundary Element Method for the study of viscous incompressible planar flow around solid bodies. The method is based on Chorins operator splitting approach for the Navier-Stokes equations written in vorticity-velocity formulation, and consists of an advection step followed by a diffusion step. The evaluation of the advection velocity exploits the Helmholtz-Hodge Decomposition, while the no-slip condition is enforced by an indirect boundary integral equation. The above decomposition and splitting are discussed in comparison to the analogous decomposition for the pressure-velocity formulation of the governing equations. The Vortex Particle Method is implemented with a completely meshless algorithm, as neither advection nor diffusion requires topological connection of the point lattice. The results of the meshless approach are compared with those obtained by a mesh-based Finite Volume Method, where the pseudo-compressible iteration is exploited to enforce the solenoidal constraint on the velocity field. Several benchmark tests were performed for verification and validation purposes. In particular, we analyzed the two-dimensional flow past a circle, past an ellipse with incidence and past a triangle for different Reynolds numbers.

Chorin's approaches revisited: Vortex Particle Method vs Finite Volume Method

Colagrossi A;
2019

Abstract

In the present paper, a Vortex Particle Method is combined with a Boundary Element Method for the study of viscous incompressible planar flow around solid bodies. The method is based on Chorins operator splitting approach for the Navier-Stokes equations written in vorticity-velocity formulation, and consists of an advection step followed by a diffusion step. The evaluation of the advection velocity exploits the Helmholtz-Hodge Decomposition, while the no-slip condition is enforced by an indirect boundary integral equation. The above decomposition and splitting are discussed in comparison to the analogous decomposition for the pressure-velocity formulation of the governing equations. The Vortex Particle Method is implemented with a completely meshless algorithm, as neither advection nor diffusion requires topological connection of the point lattice. The results of the meshless approach are compared with those obtained by a mesh-based Finite Volume Method, where the pseudo-compressible iteration is exploited to enforce the solenoidal constraint on the velocity field. Several benchmark tests were performed for verification and validation purposes. In particular, we analyzed the two-dimensional flow past a circle, past an ellipse with incidence and past a triangle for different Reynolds numbers.
2019
Istituto di iNgegneria del Mare - INM (ex INSEAN)
Inglese
106
371
388
18
http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-85066955766&origin=inward
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Vortex Particle Methods
Boundary Element Method
Viscous flows
Vortex shedding
Splitting and projection method
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Giannopoulou, O; Colagrossi, A; Di Mascio, A; Mascia, C
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
partially_open
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/387035
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