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Computational and experimental techniques for coupled acoustic/structure interactions.
Author(s) -
Anton Hartono Sumali,
Kendall Pierson,
Timothy Walsh,
Jeffrey L. Dohner,
Garth M. Reese,
David Day
Publication year - 2004
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/918386
Subject(s) - acoustic wave , acoustics , finite element method , fluid–structure interaction , displacement (psychology) , mechanics , scaling , materials science , physics , engineering , structural engineering , mathematics , geometry , psychology , psychotherapist
This report documents the results obtained during a one-year Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) initiative aimed at investigating coupled structural acoustic interactions by means of algorithm development and experiment. Finite element acoustic formulations have been developed based on fluid velocity potential and fluid displacement. Domain decomposition and diagonal scaling preconditioners were investigated for parallel implementation. A formulation that includes fluid viscosity and that can simulate both pressure and shear waves in fluid was developed. An acoustic wave tube was built, tested, and shown to be an effective means of testing acoustic loading on simple test structures. The tube is capable of creating a semi-infinite acoustic field due to nonreflecting acoustic termination at one end. In addition, a micro-torsional disk was created and tested for the purposes of investigating acoustic shear wave damping in microstructures, and the slip boundary conditions that occur along the wet interface when the Knudsen number becomes sufficiently large

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