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[Sponsors] |
Fluid-Structure Interaction for Industrial Applications - von Karman Institute Lecture Series | |
In the framework of this lectures series, several well-known experts from around the world will give lectures on the important topics related to the computational FSI in order to understand and study the FIV in different industrial applications. This lecture series aims at providing a detailed background to welcome novices in the field as well as a comprehensive overview of recent developments of computational FSI in various industrial applications. | |
Date: | March 23, 2020 - March 27, 2020 |
Location: | Waterloosesteenweg 72, Sint-Genesius-Rode (near Brussels), Belgium |
Web Page: | https://www.vki.ac.be/index.php/component/jevents/eventdetail/505/259|258|257|251|252|256|255|253|254|278|280/fluid-structure-i |
Contact Email: | debeer@vki.ac.be |
Organizer: | von Karman Institute for Fluid Dynamics |
Application Areas: | General CFD |
Special Fields: | Fluid-Structure Interaction |
Type of Event: | Course, International |
Description: | |
Flow-induced vibration (FIV) is a phenomenon resulting from the interaction of flexible structures immersed in highly energized fluid flows, and it falls in a more general category of fluid-structure interaction (FSI) problems. FIV plays an important role in many industrial applications. The knowledge and understanding of FSI/FIV are critical to estimate the lifetime of the different components (pipelines, heat exchangers, turbines etc.) with regard to fatigue, stress corrosion cracking, possible failure modes and mechanical wear. Recently, the use of numerical tools to simulate FIV has received large interest due to the availability of more computational resources and the necessity to analyse complex configurations with more details. These approaches are based on the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and Computational Structural Dynamics (CSM) tools, which are coupled together to solve FSI problems. In the framework of this lectures series, several well-known experts from around the world will give lectures on the important topics related to the computational FSI in order to understand and study the FIV in different industrial applications. This lecture series aims at providing a detailed background to welcome novices in the field as well as a comprehensive overview of recent developments of computational FSI in various industrial applications. All the participants (students, postdocs, young researchers,…) are invited to prepare a 5 minutes pitch presentation of their research. This presentation will allow the participants to further interact with the lecturers. The three best pitches will be awarded with a certificate and a prize. The Lecture Series co-directors are Dr. Afaque Shams from NRG (The Netherlands) and Mr. Philippe Planquart from the von Karman Institute (Belgium). Monday 23 March 2020 08:30 Registration 09:00 Welcome Address 09:15 Introduction to Fluid-Structure Interaction
(FSI)/Flow-Induced Vibration (FIV) 10:45 Coffee Break 11:15 FIV in Nuclear Reactor Components / Facilities 12:30 Lunch 14:00 The Importance of Understanding FIV in Nuclear
Reactor Components 15:30 Coffee Break 16:00 Analytical Methods for the Evaluation of FIV 17:30 Reception 19:00 End of the Day
Tuesday 24 March 2020 09:00 Computational Methods for FSI/FIV 10:30 Coffee Break 11:00 Turbulence Modelling: DNS, LES and RANS 12:30 Lunch 14:00 FIV in Reactor Fuel Assembly 15:30 Coffee Break 16:00 Students’
Competition 17:30 End of the Day
Wednesday 25 March 2020 09:00 Flow induced vibration applied to the fretting wear
in fuel assemblies 10:30 Coffee Break 11:00 Fluid Elastic Instabilities in Tube Bundles 12:30 Lunch 14:00 FIV in Heat Exchangers 15:30 Coffee Break 16:00 FSI / FIV in Tube Arrays 17:30 End of the Day
Thursday 26 March 2020 09:00 FIV in Steam Generators 10:30 Coffee Break 11:00 FSI/FIV in Reactor Vessel and Internals 12:30 Lunch 14:00 FSI in Pipelines 15:30 Coffee Break 16:00 FSI/FIV Real-Life Challenges for (Nuclear) Power
Plant Applications 17:30 End of the Day
Friday 27 March 2020 09:00 Reduced-order Models and Uncertainty Quantification
in FSI/FIV 10:30 Coffee Break 11:00 FSI/FIV: Static, Scaling and Thermal Analyses 12:30 Lunch 13:45 Closure and Visit to VKI’s experimental Facilities 15:30 End of the Lecture Series |
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Event record first posted on July 11, 2019, last modified on July 14, 2019 |
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