A stable added-mass partitioned (AMP) algorithm for elastic solids and incompressible flow: model problem analysis

A stable added-mass partitioned (AMP) algorithm is developed for fluid-structure interaction (FSI) problems involving viscous incompressible flow and compressible elastic-solids. The AMP scheme remains stable and second-order accurate even when added-mass and added-damping effects are large. The flu...

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Hauptverfasser: Serino, Daniel A, Banks, Jeffrey W, Henshaw, William D, Schwendeman, Donald W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A stable added-mass partitioned (AMP) algorithm is developed for fluid-structure interaction (FSI) problems involving viscous incompressible flow and compressible elastic-solids. The AMP scheme remains stable and second-order accurate even when added-mass and added-damping effects are large. The fluid is updated with an implicit-explicit (IMEX) fractional-step scheme whereby the velocity is advanced in one step, treating the viscous terms implicitly, and the pressure is computed in a second step. The AMP interface conditions for the fluid arise from the outgoing characteristic variables in the solid and are partitioned into a Robin (mixed) interface condition for the pressure, and interface conditions for the velocity. The latter conditions include an impedance-weighted average between fluid and solid velocities using a fluid impedance of a special form. A similar impedance-weighted average is used to define interface values for the solid. The fluid impedance is defined using material and discretization parameters and follows from a careful analysis of the discretization of the governing equations and coupling conditions near the interface. A normal mode analysis is performed to show that the AMP scheme is stable for a few carefully-selected model problems. Two extensions of the analysis in Banks et al. are considered, including a first-order accurate discretization of a viscous model problem and a second-order accurate discretization of an inviscid model problem. The AMP algorithm is shown to be stable for any ratio of solid and fluid densities, including when added-mass effects are large. The algorithm is verified for accuracy and stability for a set of new exact benchmark solutions where finite interface deformations are permitted. The AMP scheme is found to be stable and second-order accurate even for very difficult cases of very light solids.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1812.03192