Computational Analysis of Bubble-Structure Interactions in Near-Field Underwater Explosion
Wentao Ma, Xuning Zhao, Christine Gilbert, Kevin Wang

TL;DR
This study employs advanced computational methods to analyze how underwater explosion bubbles interact with and cause different collapse modes in thin-walled structures, revealing complex two-way interactions and the influence of bubble dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled fluid-structure computational framework that captures multiple collapse modes and mode transitions in underwater explosions, including novel insights into bubble-structure interactions.
Findings
Three collapse modes identified, including an unexpected horizontal mode.
Collapse time varies non-monotonically with explosion magnitude.
Bubble dynamics significantly influence structural deformation and vice versa.
Abstract
The response of underwater structures to a near-field explosion is coupled with the dynamics of the explosion bubble and the surrounding water. This multiphase fluid-structure interaction process is investigated using a model problem that features the yielding and collapse of a thin-walled aluminum cylinder. A recently developed computational framework that couples a compressible fluid dynamics solver with a structural dynamics solver is employed. The fluid-structure and liquid-gas interfaces are tracked using embedded boundary and level set methods. The conservation law across the interfaces is enforced by solving one-dimensional bimaterial Riemann problems. The initial pressure inside the explosion bubble is varied by two orders of magnitude in different test cases. Three different modes of collapse are discovered, including an horizontal collapse (i.e. with one lobe extending towards…
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