Abstract
Aerothermodynamics and hypersonic flows involve complex multi-disciplinary physics, including finite-rate gas-phase kinetics, finite-rate internal energy relaxation, gas-surface interactions with finite-rate oxidation and sublimation, transition to turbulence, large-scale unsteadiness, shock-boundary layer interactions, fluid-structure interactions, and thermal protection system ablation and thermal response. Many of the flows have a large range of length and time scales, requiring large computational grids, implicit time integration, and large solution run times. The University of Minnesota / NASA US3D code was designed for the simulation of these complex, highly-coupled flows. It has many of the features of the well-established DPLR code, but uses unstructured grids and has many advanced nu- merical capabilities and physical models for multi-physics problems. The main capabilities of the code are described, the physical modeling approaches are discussed, the different types of numerical flux functions and time integration approaches are outlined, and the parallelization strategy is overviewed. Comparisons between US3D and the NASA DPLR code are presented, and several advanced simulations are presented to illustrate some of novel features of the code.
Original language | English (US) |
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Title of host publication | 53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting |
Publisher | American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc, AIAA |
ISBN (Print) | 9781624103438 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2015 |
Event | 53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, 2015 - Kissimmee, United States Duration: Jan 5 2015 → Jan 9 2015 |
Publication series
Name | 53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting |
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Other
Other | 53rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, 2015 |
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Country/Territory | United States |
City | Kissimmee |
Period | 1/5/15 → 1/9/15 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2015 by Graham V. Candler.