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Section: New Results

Other topics

Sail modeling

Participants : Dominique Chapelle, Daniele Trimarchi.

This is a collaboration with Marina Vidrascu (REO team) and Stephen Turnock and Dominic Taunton (Southampton University), as part of the recently completed PhD of Daniele Trimarchi. We propose a method of modelling sail type structures which captures the wrinkling behaviour of such structures. The method is validated through experimental and analytical test cases, particularly in terms of wrinkling prediction. An enhanced wrinkling index is proposed as a valuable measure characterizing the global wrinkling development on the deformed structure. The method is based on a pseudo-dynamic finite element procedure involving non-linear MITC shell elements. The major advantage compared to membrane models generally used for this type of analysis is that no ad hoc wrinkling model is required to control the stability of the structure. We demonstrate our approach to analyse the behaviour of various structures with spherical and cylindrical shapes, characteristic of downwind sails over a rather wide range of shape and constitutive parameters. In all cases convergence is reached and the overall flying shape is most adequately represented, which shows that our approach is a most valuable alternative to standard techniques to provide deeper insight into the physical behaviour. Limitations appear only in some very special instances in which local wrinkling-related instabilities are extremely high and would require specific additional treatments, out of the scope of the present study. This work has been published in [20] .

PODs for parameter-dependent problems and estimation

Participants : Dominique Chapelle, Philippe Moireau.

This work – submitted to M2AN [24] – is derived from the latest part of Asven Gariah's PhD, jointly supervised by Jacques Sainte-Marie (Bang team) and D. Chapelle, and defended in late 2011. We address the issue of parameter variations in POD approximations of time-dependent problems, without any specific restriction on the form of parameter dependence. Considering a parabolic model problem, we propose a POD construction strategy allowing us to obtain some a priori error estimates controlled by the POD remainder – in the construction procedure – and some parameter-wise interpolation errors for the model solutions. We provide a thorough numerical assessment of this strategy with the FitzHugh-Nagumo 1D model. Finally, we give detailed illustrations of the approach in two parameter estimation applications, the first in a variational estimation framework with the FitzHugh-Nagumo model, and the second with a beating heart mechanical model for which we employ a sequential estimation method to characterize model parameters using real image data in a clinical case.