Abstract

Traditional methods for determining the load of an object in unsteady cases, such as Control-volume Momentum Integration (CMI) and Noca methods, encounter challenges related to near-body acceleration and pressure estimation. This prompts the need for innovative techniques to overcome these limitations. This study introduces a novel vorticity-based approach to expand classical load determination methods. The numerical results of an unsteady actuator disc (AD) CFD simulation are used to verify and quantify the uncertainty of the three methods. In the AD model, the load is prescribed and used as a source term. The velocity and pressure fields are solved from the Navier-Stokes equations using the open-source CFD package OpenFOAM, which offers a robust validation framework. Systematic examination of the robustness and accuracy of the three methods across various load and motion unsteady scenarios reveals that the proposed vorticity-based method excels in steady-state scenarios, exhibiting the highest level of robustness and accuracy. In contrast, the traditional CMI method proves more robust and accurate in pure motion cases. In scenarios involving static and moving AD with load variations, the new vorticity-based method demonstrates superior robustness and accuracy, mainly when moderate vorticity dynamics. Conversely, in cases with increased vorticity dynamics in the wake, the accuracy of the vorticity-based method decreases, with the CMI method showing superiority.

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