Abstract

SummaryThe fluid‐structure interaction is simulated using the boundary data immersion method. As the fluid‐structure interface is smeared in the smoothing region, deviations are incurred in fluid simulations. For compressible flow, high order difference schemes with more mesh cells for the stencils are usually employed to achieve high overall accuracy, but near interfaces it requires wider smoothing region of several mesh cells for computational stability and hence lowers its accuracy significantly. To address this issue, the proposed algorithm switches to lower order difference schemes near the interfaces and applies adaptive mesh refining there to compensate the accuracy loss. Implemented with Structured Adaptive Mesh Refinement Application Infrastructure (SAMRAI), the algorithm shows notable improvement in the overall accuracy and efficiency in cases such as channel flow and flow past a cylinder. The algorithm is used to simulate the shock wave past a fixed or free cylinder with Ma and Re , which reveals the relaxation process and the temporal evolution of the drag coefficient, it goes through a valley and maintains at relatively high value for the fixed cylinder, while that of the free cylinder tends to decrease in fluctuation which is found to be caused by the interaction between the forward moving cylinder and vortexes in the unsteady wake.

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