Development of the Inflow Boundary With a Free Surface to Apply the MPS Method to Tsunami Analysis on Coastal Areas

Author(s):  
Koichi Masuda ◽  
Tomoki Ikoma ◽  
Yasuhiro Aida ◽  
Junpei Takayama

The wave maker of MPS method, a kind of particle method, with free surface is developed in this study. This wave maker has the function of the inflow and outflow of particles. Compared to piston-type wave maker, this is possible to reduce the particle for calculation keeping wave form. As a result, this way is faster computation than that. This way controlled by fluid velocity and wave elevation is able to input propagating tsunami of actual phenomenon and data generated by the other result of MPS method and able to continue simulation. This means that it is possible to simulate in detail with 3D-MPS method after 2D-MPS method that is less computationally expensive. This approach is applied to the analysis to tsunami in coastal area. In this study, fluid pressure of run-up-tsunami affecting a building with MPS method is compared and with experiment. And applying MPS method to analysis of run-up-tsunami is considered.

Author(s):  
Nikolai I. Makarenko

The fully nonlinear problem on unsteady two-dimensional water waves generated by elliptic cylinder, that is horizontally submerged beneath a free surface, is considered. An analytical boundary integral equations method using a version of Milne-Thomson transformation is developed. Boundary equations (the BEq system) determine immediately exact wave elevation and fluid velocity at free surface. Small-time solution expansion is obtained in the case of accelerated cylinder starting from rest.


Author(s):  
K. Firoozbakhsh ◽  
M. T. Ahmadian ◽  
M. Hasanian ◽  
S. Samiezadeh

The deformation of human red blood cell has been a topic of considerable scientific interest and real-life significance. Several methods have been improved to simulate the behavior of red blood cells motion and deformation in micro-capillaries. Since in microscopic scales, using discrete models are more preferred than continuum methods, moving particle semi-implicit method (MPS) which is one of the recent innovative particle based methods, can simulate micro-fluidic flows based on Navier-Stocks equations. It has been shown that original MPS method has a lack of rapid calculation which leads to massive calculations and long time simulation. Quite a few studies have been done to improve MPS method. But the main problem, calculation of viscosity effect in conjunction with fluid pressure distribution, is still under discussion. In this paper a new algorithm is proposed that is to say by this method simulation duration decreases by the factor of 20 while the accuracy of the results remains constant. The results indicate that while the velocity precision is as well as original method, the duration of simulation is reduced more than 20 times. This significant novel MPS algorithm can be implemented in future studies for simulation of multi-fluid flows, complex geometry flows and micro-scale biomedical phenomena.


Author(s):  
B.-H. Lee ◽  
J.-C. Park ◽  
M.-H. Kim

The violent free-surface motions interacting with floating vessels containing inner liquid tanks are investigated by using the newly developed Moving Particle Semi-implicit (MPS) method for 2-dimensional incompressible flow simulation. In the present numerical examples, many efficient and robust algorithms have been developed to improve the overall quality and efficiency in solving various highly nonlinear free-surface problems and evaluating impact pressures compared to the original method proposed by Koshizuka and Oka (1996). For illustration, the improved MPS method is applied to the simulation of nonlinear floating-body motions, violent sloshing motions and corresponding impact loads, and vessel motions with inner liquid tanks. It is seen that the roll amplitudes can be significantly reduced due to the presence of the sloshing tank when the excitation frequencies are away from the lowest sloshing natural frequencies. The developed numerical tools can be used to the study of vessel motions with liquid cargo or design of passive anti-rolling devices.


2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolai I. Makarenko

The fully nonlinear problem on the unsteady water waves generated by submerged moving cylinder is considered. Using the analytic majorant method we prove local in time unique solvability of this problem. For the case when the dimensionless cylinder radius is small, the solution estimate obtained predicts rigorously dipole-like structure for the lowest order far field flow. The strength of dipole concentrated at the cylinder axis depends on the instantaneous wave form and fluid velocity at the free surface. A special case of the lifting accelerated cylinder starting from the rest is studied analytically in more detail.


Author(s):  
Nikolai I. Makarenko

The fully nonlinear problem on the unsteady water waves generated by submerged moving cylinder is considered. Using the analytic majorant method we prove local in time unique solvability of this problem. For the case when the dimensionless cylinder radius is small, the solution estimate obtained predicts rigorously dipole-like structure for the lowest order far field flow. The strength of dipole concentrated at the cylinder axis depends on the instantaneous wave form and fluid velocity at the free surface. Special case of the lifting accelerated cylinder starting from the rest is studied analytically in more detail.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (04) ◽  
pp. 1641013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youlin Zhang ◽  
Zhenyuan Tang ◽  
Decheng Wan

In this paper, interaction between regular waves and free roll motion of a two-dimensional (2D) floating body is investigated by our in-house meshless particle solver MLParticle-SJTU based on modified moving particle semi-implicit (MPS) method. Numerical wave tank (NWT) is developed to calculate the interaction between waves and floating body, including wave-maker module and free roll motion module. The comparison between the numerical wave elevation and analytical solution shows that the MLParticle-SJTU solver can provide acceptable accuracy of wave making. Roll motion and force acting on the floating body in waves are in good agreement with experimental results. Profiles of the wave surface surrounding floating body are presented.


Vestnik MEI ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 13-19
Author(s):  
D. V. Gudemenko ◽  
◽  
P. S. Klimov ◽  
V. I. Melikhov ◽  
O. I. Melikhov ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Chunhui Wang ◽  
Chunyu Guo ◽  
Fenglei Han

Modified 3D Moving Particle Semi-Implicit (MPS) method is used to complete the numerical simulation of the fluid sloshing in LNG tank under multidegree excitation motion, which is compared with the results of experiments and 2D calculations obtained by other scholars to verify the reliability. The cubic spline kernel functions used in Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method are adopted to reduce the deviation caused by consecutive two times weighted average calculations; the boundary conditions and the determination of free surface particles are modified to improve the computational stability and accuracy of 3D calculation. The tank is under forced multidegree excitation motion to simulate the real conditions of LNG ships, the pressures and the free surfaces at different times are given to verify the accuracy of 3D simulation, and the free surface and the splashed particles can be simulated more exactly.


2009 ◽  
Vol 132 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomoyo Taniguchi ◽  
Yoshinori Ando

To protect flat-bottom cylindrical tanks against severe damage from uplift motion, accurate evaluation of accompanying fluid pressures is indispensable. This paper presents a mathematical solution for evaluating the fluid pressure on a rigid flat-bottom cylindrical tank in the same manner as the procedure outlined and discussed previously by the authors (Taniguchi, T., and Ando, Y., 2010, “Fluid Pressures on Unanchored Rigid Rectangular Tanks Under Action of Uplifting Acceleration,” ASME J. Pressure Vessel Technol., 132(1), p. 011801). With perfect fluid and velocity potential assumed, the Laplace equation in cylindrical coordinates gives a continuity equation, while fluid velocity imparted by the displacement (and its time derivatives) of the shell and bottom plate of the tank defines boundary conditions. The velocity potential is solved with the Fourier–Bessel expansion, and its derivative, with respect to time, gives the fluid pressure at an arbitrary point inside the tank. In practice, designers have to calculate the fluid pressure on the tank whose perimeter of the bottom plate lifts off the ground like a crescent in plan view. However, the asymmetric boundary condition given by the fluid velocity imparted by the deformation of the crescent-like uplift region at the bottom cannot be expressed properly in cylindrical coordinates. This paper examines applicability of a slice model, which is a rigid rectangular tank with a unit depth vertically sliced out of a rigid flat-bottom cylindrical tank with a certain deviation from (in parallel to) the center line of the tank. A mathematical solution for evaluating the fluid pressure on a rigid flat-bottom cylindrical tank accompanying the angular acceleration acting on the pivoting bottom edge of the tank is given by an explicit function of a dimensional variable of the tank, but with Fourier series. It well converges with a few first terms of the Fourier series and accurately calculates the values of the fluid pressure on the tank. In addition, the slice model approximates well the values of the fluid pressure on the shell of a rigid flat-bottom cylindrical tank for any points deviated from the center line. For the designers’ convenience, diagrams that depict the fluid pressures normalized by the maximum tangential acceleration given by the product of the angular acceleration and diagonals of the tank are also presented. The proposed mathematical and graphical methods are cost effective and aid in the design of the flat-bottom cylindrical tanks that allow the uplifting of the bottom plate.


Author(s):  
Timothée Jamin ◽  
Leonardo Gordillo ◽  
Gerardo Ruiz-Chavarría ◽  
Michael Berhanu ◽  
Eric Falcon

We report laboratory experiments on surface waves generated in a uniform fluid layer whose bottom undergoes an upward motion. Simultaneous measurements of the free-surface deformation and the fluid velocity field are focused on the role of the bottom kinematics (i.e. its spatio-temporal features) in wave generation. We observe that the fluid layer transfers bottom motion to the free surface as a temporal high-pass filter coupled with a spatial low-pass filter. Both filter effects are often neglected in tsunami warning systems, particularly in real-time forecast. Our results display good agreement with a prevailing linear theory without any parameter fitting. Based on our experimental findings, we provide a simple theoretical approach for modelling the rapid kinematics limit that is applicable even for initially non-flat bottoms: this may be a key step for more realistic varying bathymetry in tsunami scenarios.


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