A comparison between the boundary element method and the wave superposition approach for the analysis of the scattered fields from rigid bodies and elastic shells.

Autor: Miller, Russel D., Moyer, E. Thomas, Huang, Hanson, Überall, Herbert
Zdroj: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America; 1991, Vol. 89 Issue 5, p2185-2196, 12p
Abstrakt: The steady state analysis of the scattering of plane acoustic waves from submerged rigid and elastic bodies using two approaches is presented. The first approach uses a combined finite element/boundary element (FE/BE) methodology. The NASA structural analysis (NASTRAN) program is used to formulate the structural matrices based on the finite element method (FEM). The surface integral equation radiation and scattering (SIERRAS) program creates the fluid matrices based on the boundary element method (BEM) and solves the coupled fluid-structure interaction problem. A superparametric boundary element (BE) with nine nodes is employed. The combined Helmholtz integral equation formulation (CHIEF) is employed to provide a unique solution for all frequencies. In the second approach, the superposition method (SUP) is used for modeling the fluid. The SUP method is an off-boundary approach that employs a number of point sources moved inside the body to represent the fluid response at the surface. This allows the fluid matrices to be formed without surface integration. Formulations for the SUP method are introduced for both the radiation and scattering problems. The program SUPER reads the NASTRAN structural matrices and solves the combined FE/SUP fluid-structure equations. The FE/BEM and FE/SUP methods are applied to the scattering of an infinite set of plane waves from a submerged rigid sphere, rigid prolate spheroid, right cylinder, and from an elastic cylindrical shell with hemispherical endcaps. The SUP method is found to be easier to implement and to provide an accurate result at internal resonance frequencies where the BEM requires additional equations to ensure an accurate solution. © 1991 Acoustical Society of America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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