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Published September 15, 2016 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Accurate computation of surface stresses and forces with immersed boundary methods

Abstract

Many immersed boundary methods solve for surface stresses that impose the velocity boundary conditions on an immersed body. These surface stresses may contain spurious oscillations that make them ill-suited for representing the physical surface stresses on the body. Moreover, these inaccurate stresses often lead to unphysical oscillations in the history of integrated surface forces such as the coefficient of lift. While the errors in the surface stresses and forces do not necessarily affect the convergence of the velocity field, it is desirable, especially in fluid–structure interaction problems, to obtain smooth and convergent stress distributions on the surface. To this end, we show that the equation for the surface stresses is an integral equation of the first kind whose ill-posedness is the source of spurious oscillations in the stresses. We also demonstrate that for sufficiently smooth delta functions, the oscillations may be filtered out to obtain physically accurate surface stresses. The filtering is applied as a post-processing procedure, so that the convergence of the velocity field is unaffected. We demonstrate the efficacy of the method by computing stresses and forces that converge to the physical stresses and forces for several test problems.

Additional Information

© 2016 Elsevier Inc. Received 9 December 2015; Received in revised form 7 June 2016; Accepted 8 June 2016; Available online 9 June 2016. This research was partially supported by a grant from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Grant No.1492185). Many of the simulations were performed using the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE), which is supported by National Science Foundation grant number ACI-1053575. The first author gratefully acknowledges funding from the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program (Grant No. DGE-1144469). We thank Dr. Aaron Towne for insightful conversations about spectral decompositions of inverse operators, and Ms. Tess Saxton-Fox for her help in editing the manuscript.

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August 22, 2023
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