Heat Flux Predictions using a 3D Near Body Solver on an Adaptive Block-Structured Cartesian Off-Body Grid

Joel A. McQuaid, Aleksander L. Zibitsker, Alexandre Martin, Christoph Brehm

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The pre-processing step for simulating hypersonic flows including the material response around complex flight vehicles can be very time-consuming using traditional body-conformal grids. The generation of high quality grids while maintaining shock alignment and wall orthogonality becomes extremely problematic for geometries of increasing complexity. Furthermore, accurate heat flux predictions are known to be very sensitive to the employed numerical scheme and the quality of the grid. The use of Cartesian grid solvers in this respect, provides a number of advantages such as automatic volume mesh generation processes and hands-off shock tracking with adaptive mesh refinement. Cartesian solvers have difficulty in achieving adequate flux reconstruction in the near-wall region and generally do not contain wall-aligned grids for most geometries making hypersonic viscous flow applications difficult to model. A near body solver is used as a body-conformal solver to capture these viscous interactions and couple them back into the Cartesian solution. This NBS-Cart solver has previously been validated for perfect gas and high-enthalpy flows for 2D and axisymmetric flows. The work shown here seeks to extend the solver to arbitrarily complex 3D geometries to demonstrate the feasibility of this solver under a wide range of hypersonic viscous flow applications. Validation of the perfect gas solver is presented for a scale MSL capsule and the Orion CEV, while the thermo-chemical non-equilibrium solver is validated with a scale MSL capsule using a 5-species air model based on computed surface heating and pressure profiles at various angles of attack.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2023
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023
EventAIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2023 - Orlando, United States
Duration: Jan 23 2023Jan 27 2023

Publication series

NameAIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2023

Conference

ConferenceAIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2023
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityOrlando
Period1/23/231/27/23

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc, AIAA. All rights reserved.

Funding

The authors would like to recognize and show appreciation for the financial support provided by NASA Kentucky EPSCoR RA Award (NCE) no. 80NSSC19M0144 with E. Stern as the technical monitor, and from the NASA ACCESS program award no. 80NSSC21K1117. The authors would also like to thank the collaborators from NASA Ames Research Center, NASA Langley Research Center, and the NASA Johnson Space Center. The funding support provided by the DoD HPC Modernization Program under contract FA700-19-2-0002 with Dr. Russ Cummings (Director of Hypersonic Vehicle Simulation Institute (HVSI)) as program manager is also gratefully acknowledged.

FundersFunder number
NASA Johnson Space Center
Ames Research Center
Hypersonic Vehicle Simulation Institute
HVSI
Kentucky NASA EPSCoR RIA
Langley Research Center
NCE80NSSC19M0144
NASA80NSSC21K1117
DOD BCRPFA700-19-2-0002

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Aerospace Engineering

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