Title: SHEAR STRESS
1SHEAR STRESS
A. M. Artoli1 , D. Kandhai2, H.G. Hoefsloot3,
A.G. Hoekstra1 and P.M.A. Sloot1
2IN LATTICE BOLTZMANN
Motivation
- Shear stress plays a dominant role in
biomechanical deseases related to blood flow
problems.
Aorta with a bypass
3 SIMULATIONS
- Conventionally, the shear stress is calculated
from the computed gradients of velocity profiles
obtained from experimental or simulation models. -
4Why LBM?
- Recently, the Lattice Boltzmann Method (LBM) has
attracted much attention in simulations of
complex fluid flow problems for its simple
implementation and inherent parallelism. -
- The LBM can be used to calculate the local
components of the stress tensor in fluid flows
WITHOUT a need to estimate velocity gradients.
This has two benefits over conventional CFD
methods Increasing accuracy and decreasing
computational cost.
5Definition
- The stress tensor is defined as1
1 L.Landau and E. Lifshitz, Fluid mechanics,
Pergamon Press (1959).
6The LBM
- The LBM is a first order finite difference
discretization of the Boltzmann Equation - that describes the dynamics of continuous
particle distribution function which
is the probability of finding a particle with
microscopic velocity - The velocity is descritized into a set of vectors
ei - The inter-particle interactions are contained in
the collision term W - The resulting Lattice Boltzmann Equation is
- The collision term is simplified to the linear
case via the single time relaxation Approximation
(STRA)
7Theory
- The equilibrium distribution is given by
-
- where
- wi 4/9 for the rest particle, 1/9 for
particles moving in x and y directions and 1/36 - for diagonal ones. Also,
-
- Conservation laws are satisfied
- mass
- momentum
8Theory , cont.
- The LB equation is then discretized in space and
time to yield - Using the multi-scale Chapman expansion of the
kinetic moments of the distribution functions,
the macroscopic NS equation can be derived in the
limit of low Mach number (u ltlt Cs the speed of
sound). - Where is the pressure.
- The kinematic viscosity and the equation of state
are given by
9The stress tensor in LBM
The stress tensor for a 9 particles 2D LBM model
is given by 2 where is the
dissipative part of the momentum tensor , which
can be obtained during the collision operation,
without a need to take the derivatives
2 S. Hou, S. Chen, g. Doolen and A. Cogley.
J.Comp.Phys. 118, 329 (1995).
10How the stress tensor is computed?
- Select a model (e.gD2Q9)
- For All nodes
- compute the density and velocity from the fis
- initialize sab with 0
- for all directions
- . sab cka ckb Df (1-1/(2t)) -r cs2
dab. - Collide fab k fabk-(fabk- fab
eqk)/t -
11BENCHMARK-1
- Plane Poiseulle steady flow
- Analytic solutions
12BENCHMARK-2
Couette Flow with injection upper wall moves with
hrizontal velocity Un Lower veocity is
fixed Vertical injection with speed U0 Analytic
solutions
13BENCHMARK-3
Symmetric Bifurcation
14Simulations
15Simulations-2
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22Ongoing Research
- 2D oscillatory Poiseuille flow
- a 3.07
- error 10-2 for integer time steps and 10-15
for half-time steps. - shown Full-period analytic solutions (lines) and
simulation results (points)
23Womersley solution
- 3D Preliminary Results
- error for integer time steps and for
half-time steps. - shown Full-period Analytic solutions (lines) and
simulation results (points)
24Conclusions
- With LBM, the shear stress can be obtained from
the distribution functions without a need to
compute derivatives of velocity profiles. - LBM is second order accurate in space and time.
- Pulsatile shear stress can still yield accurate
results.
25Benchmarks Analytic Solutions
2D
3D
26Flow characteristics
- There is a Phase lag between the pressure and the
fluid motion. - At low a, steady Poiseuille flow is obtained.
- At high a, we have the annular effect
- Profiles are flattened
- The phase lag increases toward the center.
- The shear stress is very low near the center and
reasonably high at the walls.
27Simulations
- Flow is driven by a time dependent body force
- P A sin(w t) in the x-direction. A initial
Magnitude of P, w angular frequency, t
simulation time . - Boundary conditions
- inlet and outlet Periodic boundaries.
- Walls bounce-Back
- Parameters
- a ranges from 1-15
- t 1
- Grid size
- 2D 10 x50 for a and 20 x100 for a
- 3D 50 x 50 x 100
28Results, Continued
- a
- error 10-2 for integer time steps and 10-15
for half-time steps. - shown Full-period Analytic solutions (lines) and
simulation results (points)