• Title/Summary/Keyword: Surface Pressure-Body Geometry Relation

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A Study on the Viscous Inverse Method for the High Speed Axisymmetric Body Design (고속 축대칭 비행체 설계를 위한 점성 Inverse 기법 연구)

  • Lee Young-Ki;Lee Jaewoo
    • Journal of computational fluids engineering
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.35-43
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    • 1997
  • An efficient inverse method for 1.he supersonic/hypersonic axisymmetric body design is developed for the parabolized Navier-Stokes equations. The developed method is examined numerically for three extreme testcases in the supersonic(M/sub ∞/=3.0) and hypersonic(M/sub ∞/=6.28) speeds. The first one is a negative pressure distribution near a vacuum pressure and the second one is a positive pressure distribution over the whole region of the body. The last one is the case of abrupt change of pressure distribution to zero in the forward region of the body. These testcases show the robustness of the method. By introducing a regular-falsi method and by using a not-fully converged inverse solution, the convergence behavior was greatly improved.

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A Study on the Design of Ship′s Bow Form using Surface Panel Method (판요소법을 이용한 선수형상 설계에 관한 연구[1])

  • Jae-Hoon Yoo;Hyo-Chul Kim
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
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    • v.33 no.3
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    • pp.35-47
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    • 1996
  • A surface panel method treating a boundary-value problem of the Dirichlet type is presented to design a three dimensional body with free surface corresponding to a prescribed pressure distribution. An integral equation is derived from Green's theorem, giving a relation between total potential of known strength and the unknown local flux. Upon discretization, a system of linear simultaneous equations is formed including free surface boundary condition and is solved for an assumed geometry. The pseudo local flux, present due to the incorrect positioning of the assumed geometry, plays a role f the geometry corrector, with which the new geometry is computed for the next iteration. Sample designs for submerged spheroids and Wigley hull and carried out to demonstrate the stable convergence, the effectiveness and the robustness of the method. For the calculation of the wave resistance, normal dipoles and Rankine sources are distributed on the body surface and Rankine sources on the free surface. The free surface boundary condition is linearized with respect to the oncoming flow. Four-points upwind finite difference scheme is used to compute the free surface boundary condition. A hyperboloidal panel is adopted to represent the hull surface, which can compensate the defects of the low-order panel method. The design of a 5500TEU container carrier is performed with respect to reduction of the wave resistance. To reduce the wave resistance, calculated pressure on the hull surface is modified to have the lower fluctuation, and is applied as a Dirichlet type dynamic boundary condition on the hull surface. The designed hull form is verified to have the lower wave resistance than the initial one not only by computation but by experiment.

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Study on Steady Flow Effects in Numerical Computation of Added Resistance of Ship in Waves

  • Lee, Jae-Hoon;Kim, Beom-Soo;Kim, Yonghwan
    • Journal of Advanced Research in Ocean Engineering
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    • v.3 no.4
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    • pp.193-203
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    • 2017
  • This study investigated the steady-flow effects present in the numerical computation of the resistance added to a ship in waves. For a ship advancing in the forward direction, a time-domain 3D Rankine panel method is applied to solve the ship motion problem, and the added resistance due to waves is calculated using a near-field method, with the direct integration of the second-order pressure on the hull surface. In the linear potential theory, the steady flow is approximated by the basis potential of a uniform flow or double-body flow in order to linearize the boundary conditions. By applying these two different linearization schemes, the coupling effects between steady and unsteady solutions were examined. Furthermore, in order to analyze the steady-flow effects on the hull geometry, the computation results for two realistic hull forms, a KVLCC2 tanker and DTC containership, were compared. In particular, the mj term, which represents the coupling effects under the body boundary condition, was evaluated considering the geometry of a non-wall-sided ship. Lastly, the characteristics of the linearization schemes were examined in relation to the disturbed waves around a ship and the components of added resistance.

Subsonic/Transonic Airfoil Design Using an Inverse Method (Inverse 기법을 이용한 아음속/천음속 익형 설계)

  • Lee Young-Ki;Lee Jae-Woo;Byun Yung-Hwan
    • Journal of computational fluids engineering
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    • v.3 no.1
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    • pp.46-53
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    • 1998
  • An inverse method for the subsonic and transonic airfoil design was developed using the Euler equations. Two testcases were performed. One was a verification of the method using the supercritical airfoil of the Korean mid-sized (100 passengers class) transport aircraft. The other was the design of an airfoil showing a good cruising performance (L/D ratio) in the high subsonic flow regime. These testcases demonstrated the efficiency and the robustness of the design method in the present study.

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