A continuum treatment of sliding in Eulerian simulations of solid-solid and solid-fluid interfaces

ORAL

Abstract

A novel treatment of sliding is developed for use in an Eulerian framework for simulating elastic-plastic deformations of solids coupled with fluids. In this method, embedded interfacial boundary conditions for perfect sliding are imposed by enforcing the interface normal to be a principal direction of the Cauchy stress and appropriate consistency conditions ensure correct transmission and reflection of waves at the interface. This sliding treatment may be used either to simulate a solid-solid sliding interface or to incorporate an internal slip boundary condition at a solid-fluid interface. Sliding laws like the Coulomb friction law can also be incorporated with relative ease into this framework. Simulations of sliding interfaces are conducted using a 10\textsuperscript{th} order compact finite difference scheme and a Localized Artificial Diffusivity (LAD) scheme for shock and interface capturing. 1D and 2D simulations are used to assess the accuracy of the sliding treatment. The Richmyer-Meshkov instability between copper and aluminum is simulated with this sliding treatment as a demonstration test case.

*Support for this work was provided through Grant B612155 from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, US Department of Energy.

Authors

  • Akshay Subramaniam

    • Stanford Univ
  • Niranjan Ghaisas

    • Stanford University
    • Stanford Univ
  • Sanjiva Lele

    • Stanford University
    • Stanford Univ