Cette thèse porte sur le développement de modèles multi-échelles et de méthodes de calcul pour les applications aérothermodynamiques. Le travail de recherche sur les modèles multi-échelles met l’accent sur l’excitation énergétique et la dissociation. L’objectif était double : mieux comprendre la dynamique des processus d'excitation énergétique et dissociation et développer des modèles réduits en diminuant la résolution d’un modèle détaillé de collisions rovibrationnelles. Les résultats obtenus ont montré que les modèles réduits permettent de reproduire avec précision la dynamique d’écoulement prédites par le modèle détaillé de collisions rovibrationnelles. Le travail de recherche sur les méthodes de calcul a porté sur les écoulements raréfiés. L’objectif était de formuler une méthode numérique de type déterministe pour résoudre l’équation de Boltzmann dans le cas de gaz à plusieurs composants y compris l’énergie interne. La méthode numérique est basée sur la structure de convolution pondérée de la transformée de Fourier de l’équation de Boltzmann. La précision de la méthode numérique proposée a été évaluée en comparant les moments extraits de la fonction de distribution de vitesse avec les prédictions de la méthode de simulation directe Monte Carlo (DSMC). Dans toutes les applications étudiées, un excellent accord a été trouvé. / This thesis aimed at developing multi-scale models and computational methods for aerother-modynamics applications. The research on multi-scale models has focused on internal energy excitation and dissociation of molecular gases in atmospheric entry flows. The scope was two-fold: to gain insight into the dynamics of internal energy excitation and dissociation in the hydrodynamic regime and to develop reduced models for Computational Fluid Dynamics applications. The reduced models have been constructed by coarsening the resolution of a detailed rovibrational collisional model developed based on ab-initio data for the N2 (1Σ+g)-N (4Su) system provided by the Computational Quantum Chemistry Group at NASA Ames Research Center. Different mechanism reduction techniques have been proposed. Their appli-cation led to the formulation of conventional macroscopic multi-temperature models and vi-brational collisional models, and innovative energy bin models. The accuracy of the reduced models has been assessed by means of a systematic comparison with the predictions of the detailed rovibrational collisional model. Applications considered are inviscid flows behind normal shock waves, within converging-diverging nozzles and around axisymmetric bodies, and viscous flows along the stagnation-line of blunt bodies. The detailed rovibrational colli-sional model and the reduced models have been coupled to two flow solvers developed from scratch in FORTRAN 90 programming language (SHOCKING_F90 and SOLV-ER_FVMCC_F90). The results obtained have shown that the innovative energy bin models are able to reproduce the flow dynamics predicted by the detailed rovibrational collisional model with a noticeable benefit in terms of computing time. The energy bin models are also more accurate than the conventional multi-temperature and vibrational collisional models. The research on computational methods has focused on rarefied flows. The scope was to formu-late a deterministic numerical method for solving the Boltzmann equation in the case of multi-component gases with internal energy by accounting for both elastic and inelastic collisions. The numerical method, based on the weighted convolution structure of the Fourier trans-formed Boltzmann equation, is an extension of an existing spectral-Lagrangian method, valid for a mono-component gas without internal energy. During the development of the method, particular attention has been devoted to ensure the conservation of mass, momentum and en-ergy while evaluating the collision operators. Conservation is enforced through the solution of constrained optimization problems, formulated in a consistent manner with the collisional in-variants. The extended spectral-Lagrangian method has been implemented in a parallel com-putational tool (best; Boltzmann Equation Spectral Solver) written in C programming lan-guage. Applications considered are the time-evolution of an isochoric gaseous system initially set in a non-equilibrium state and the steady flow across a normal shock wave. The accuracy of the proposed numerical method has been assessed by comparing the moments extracted from the velocity distribution function with Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method predictions. In all the cases, an excellent agreement has been found. The computational results obtained for both space homogeneous and space inhomogeneous problems have also shown that the enforcement of conservation is mandatory for obtaining accurate numerical solutions.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:theses.fr/2014ECAP0008 |
Date | 21 January 2014 |
Creators | Munafo, Alessandro |
Contributors | Châtenay-Malabry, Ecole centrale de Paris, Bourdon, Anne |
Source Sets | Dépôt national des thèses électroniques françaises |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation, Text |
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