Abstract

Abstract In this work, a scalable parallel computing scheme for the hierarchical multiscale off-road vehicle mobility simulation capability is developed with the hybrid message passing interface (MPI)/OpenMP framework, and it is validated against full-scale vehicle test data. While the hierarchical multiscale modeling approach has been introduced to high-fidelity off-road mobility simulations to eliminate limitations of existing single-scale deformable terrain models, computational complexities associated with the large dimensionality of multibody vehicle equations, involving nonlinear finite element tires and multiscale terrain models, need to be addressed for use in full-scale vehicle mobility predictions. To this end, a co-simulation framework for the multiscale off-road vehicle mobility model is proposed by exploiting the moving soil patch technique. This allows for systematically extracting four moving soil patches for four tires in a vehicle model from the deformable terrain domain, and time integrations of the four tire–soil subsystems are performed concurrently to enable computational speedup. Furthermore, an automated updating scheme for multiscale moving soil patches for a full vehicle model is developed, considering the multipass effect in various vehicle maneuvering scenarios. To demonstrate the off-road mobility prediction capability using the proposed parallelized multiscale vehicle–terrain interaction simulation algorithm, full-scale vehicle validation is presented for the vehicle drawbar pull as well as variable grade hill climb tests on soft soil.

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