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FLUID STRUCTURE INTERACTIONS RESEARCH GROUP

A Numerical Investigation on Integrated Active Smart Material-Solid-Fluid Interaction Systems


Dr A. Bucchi, SDIA, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy Supervisor Prof. J. T. Xing, SES, University of Southampton, UK Supervisor Prof. P. Gaudenzi, SDIA, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy
Background
Multi-physics problems such as electro-elasticity, thermo-electroelasticity and fluid structure interaction (FSI) are new trends of numerical simulation and modelling. The motivation that leads this research has come from the importance of modelling fluid-structure interactions in many engineering fields, such as aerospace (fluttering of wings, inflatable structures, sloshing in tank, parachute and descending-landing systems), bio-medical (blood flow in arteries), civil (wind induced oscillations of bridges, vibrations and water hammer in pipe network), mechanical (airbags inflation, engines, pumps, heat exchangers) and naval engineering (marine vehicles, offshore structures, sails). Introduce a smart material such as piezoelectric material in an host structure, permits to create an active structure and realize a fluid active structure interaction. Piezoelectric materials exhibit a two-ways coupling between mechanical field and electric field, so this permits to enhance capabilities of the host structure and it makes possible structural health monitoring, shape morphing and vibration control. Direct piezoelectric effect transforms mechanical force applied to the material in electric voltage and hence, piezoelectric material is used as sensor. Typical applications are strain gages, pressure transducers and accelerometers; an advanced use of piezoelectric as sensor is in structural health monitoring. Converse piezoelectric effect transforms an electrical input, voltage, in a mechanical output such as structure deformation and hence, piezoelectric material is used as actuator. An advanced use of piezoelectric as actuator is in micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) or in structural shape morphing (e.g. inflatable wing). An example of combined use of piezoelectric sensors and actuators is represented by vibration damping or acoustic noise attenuation and control.

Three field interaction algorithm

Fig. 3: CFD & CSD solver

Fig. 2: Coupling algorithm

Fig. 4: Interface data exchanges

A monolithic or simultaneous treatment is used to couple piezoelectric material with linear elastic solid; instead a partitioned but strongly coupled (algorithm performs many iterations between CFD solver and CSD solver into the same time step) is reserved to couple incompressible fluid with active structure (figs. 2-3). Interface (fig. 4) has the role of data exchange between fluid and active structure: interface is a natural or Neumann boundary condition for the structure (force imposed) and it is an essential or Dirichlet boundary condition for the fluid (velocity imposed). Balloon inflatable structure with piezoelectric sensors In this example a rectangular bi-dimensional thin structure is deformed by fluid forces acting on it; the inflation of the structure is followed during total time T = 0.55 s by two piezoelectric sensors positioned on the left and right side of the structure. Fluid selected is air, structure with thickness 1 mm (material properties: = 900 kg/m E = 1 GPa = 0.3) is modelled by bi-dimensional solid element and clamped at the base on the left and right side. Piezoelectric sensor are 0.2 m long with a thickness of 0.5 mm; electrical boundary conditions prescribed for piezoelectric patches are 0 electrical potential (short circuited electrodes). (fig. 8)

The research Finite element method has been selected in this research, for its versatility in managing complex geometry involved in problems of practical interest and to unify the numeric modellization of three different physic fields: incompressible-viscous fluid, solid structures and piezoelectric materials (fig.1).

Fig. 1: Fluid Active-structure Interaction

A mixed finite element formulation is used to solve the non linear incompressible, viscous and time dependent fluid flow in arbitrary lagrangian-eulerian formulation (ALE); instead a classical finite element displacement formulation for linear elasticity, is used to solve an active structure made of solid with piezoelectric material. A two-ways interaction between incompressible fluid and active structure is modelled and simulated: Viscous fluid gives forces to the structure due to normal stresses (related to pressure) and shear stresses (related to gradient of velocity); these forces deform the structure and the deformation is revealed and transformed by piezoelectric material (sensor), via a charge amplifier, in an electric output (voltage). During deformation of the structure the fluid flow domain is changed and a two-ways interaction is activated. Piezoelectric can be used as an actuator (electric voltage input is transformed in mechanical output), the structure is deformed and the fluid flow domain is changed, thus a two-ways interaction is activated.

Fig. 5: Boundary condition and geometry

Fig. 6: Un-deformed and deformed mesh

Fig.7 : Pressure field at time t=0.15 s t=0.35 s t=0.55 s

Fig.8 : Nodal charge on right piezoelectric sensor

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