NUMERICAL STUDY OF HYPERSONIC FLUID-STRUCTURE INTERACTION ON A CANTILEVERED PLATE WITH SHOCK IMPINGEMENT
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IOE Pulchowk Campus
Abstract
Aeroelastic vibration of compliant wing panels and control surfaces is a major design
concern in hypersonic vehicles. Impingement of shock waves of varying intensity also
adds to the aeroelastic effect and vibration. UNSW Canberra’s Hypersonic Multibody
Aeroelastic eXperiment (HyMAX) serves as a benchmark test case for Fluid-Structure
Interaction (FSI) in hypersonic flows. This study carries out a numerical study of the
HyMAX experimental setup at a flow deflection angle of 10° using both low-fidelity
modeling (LFM) and high-fidelity modeling (HFM) approaches. In the LFM approach,
an analytical SE-based Piston Theory and a CFD-Enriched Piston Theory were used.
And, a two-way partitioned approach using OpenFOAM, Calculix, and PreCICE was
used for the HFM. The cantilevered plate deformed around the first mode. Peak pressure
variation and the trailing edge displacement history showed similar nature indicating
that the FSI phenomenon was dominated mostly by the local pressure changes over
the plate. The peak pressure approximations results of both the LFM and the HFM
highlighted the quasi-steady nature of the problem. The peak pressure value predicted
by the viscous CFD is around 4% (300 Pa) more when compared to the inviscid CFD
result and the maximum trailing edge deflection (3.96 mm) predicted by the viscous
FSI is about 4 % higher than the value predicted by the inviscid FSI (3.80 mm), which
can be attributed to Shock-Wave Boundary Layer Interaction (SWBLI) phenomenon,
leading edge shock wave, and other viscous effects. The Shock-Expansion based Piston
Theory (PT) predicted the maximum trailing edge displacement with about 8 % error
in HyFoil HH (with no shock impingements) but with about 14 % error in HyMAx
(with shock impingement). In the case of the shock-impingement, CFD Enriched PT
was found to make a better prediction with only about an 6.82% error with respect to
the viscous FSI result. The computation time required for a flow duration of 200 ms
for CFD Enriched PT was very short only about 4 hours as compared to about 24 hours
for the inviscid FSI and 480 hours for viscous FSI. Hence, CFD Enriched PT can be an
effective tool for preliminary aeroelastic analysis
Description
Fluid-Structure Interaction (FSI) is a class of problems describing the coupling of the
governing laws of fluid and structural dynamics. The flow behavior is determined by
the structure’s shape and motion, and the structure’s motion and deformation are determined by the fluid mechanics forces acting on it
