A computational procedure for prebending of wind turbine blades
DOI10.1002/nme.3244zbMath1242.74026OpenAlexW1836655891MaRDI QIDQ2894899
Yuri Bazilevs, Josef Kiendl, Ming-Chen Hsu, David J. Benson
Publication date: 2 July 2012
Published in: International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/nme.3244
compositescomputational fluid dynamicsfluidisogeometric analysisoffshore windthin shellswind turbine bladestructure interactionwind turbine rotorcomputational structural mechanicsblade prebendinginverse deformation
Fluid-solid interactions (including aero- and hydro-elasticity, porosity, etc.) (74F10) Finite element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S05) Numerical approximation of solutions of dynamical problems in solid mechanics (74H15)
Related Items
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Isogeometric analysis using T-splines
- Adaptive isogeometric analysis by local \(h\)-refinement with T-splines
- Isogeometric shell analysis: the Reissner-Mindlin shell
- Isogeometric shell analysis with Kirchhoff-Love elements
- The bending strip method for isogeometric analysis of Kirchhoff-Love shell structures comprised of multiple patches
- Variational multiscale residual-based turbulence modeling for large eddy simulation of incompressible flows
- Isogeometric analysis: CAD, finite elements, NURBS, exact geometry and mesh refinement
- Large eddy simulation of turbulent Taylor-Couette flow using isogeometric analysis and the residual-based variational multiscale method
- Weak Dirichlet boundary conditions for wall-bounded turbulent flows
- Computational methods for inverse finite elastostatics
- Isogeometric variational multiscale modeling of wall-bounded turbulent flows with weakly enforced boundary conditions on unstretched meshes
- Inverse deformation results in finite elasticity
- 3D simulation of wind turbine rotors at full scale. Part I: Geometry modeling and aerodynamics
- 3D simulation of wind turbine rotors at full scale. Part II: Fluid-structure interaction modeling with composite blades
- Space-time finite element computation of arterial fluid-structure interactions with patient-specific data
- Arterial fluid mechanics modeling with the stabilized space–time fluid–structure interaction technique