Stokesian Dynamic Simulation of Sedimenting Spheres in a Newtonian Fluid

Computes 3D trajectories of sedimenting spheres at low Re numbers.
3K descargas
Actualizado 30 sep 2005

Sin licencia

Stokesian Dynamics, a method developed by Brady and Bossis in the 80s, simulates the 3D motion of hydrodynamically interacting spheres at low Reynolds numbers. This program was originally written by Professor Ron Phillips during his PhD thesis at MIT in 1989. The code was adapted from Fortran 77 to a MATLAB program by Housam Binous. Permission was obtained from Professor Phillips to post this work. Using Euler's integration scheme was one simplification of the original code that was performed by Housam Binous. The code call a .m file called NEWTON2.m, which needs three files TEMPM.m, FTMOB.m and SSI.m as well as a data file called data.m. Several simulations are presented in the programs called StokesianDynamics. Two sphere's falling at low Reynolds number can have lateral motion during their fall. Two spheres can also rotate, as they sediment, for certain initial configurations. Four vertically aligned spheres, initially at equal distance from each others, will tend to drift apart. Four and six spheres sedimenting will show periodic arrangements that are very peculiar. This Stokesian Dynamics method was extended to non-Newtonian fluids by Binous and Phillips in 1999 who used FENE dumbbell suspensions.

Citar como

Housam Binous (2024). Stokesian Dynamic Simulation of Sedimenting Spheres in a Newtonian Fluid (https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/8594-stokesian-dynamic-simulation-of-sedimenting-spheres-in-a-newtonian-fluid), MATLAB Central File Exchange. Recuperado .

Compatibilidad con la versión de MATLAB
Se creó con R13
Compatible con cualquier versión
Compatibilidad con las plataformas
Windows macOS Linux
Categorías
Más información sobre Fluid Dynamics en Help Center y MATLAB Answers.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!
Versión Publicado Notas de la versión
1.0.0.0