Acoustic Analysis Using Symmetrised Implicit Midpoint Rule

Authors

  • Noorhelyna Razali Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9333-3012
  • Nisa Balqis Masnoor Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4869-4289
  • Shahrum Abdullah Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
  • Muhammad Faiz Hilmi Mohd Zainaphi Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing, Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3221/IGF-ESIS.61.14

Keywords:

Numerical Method, Runge-Kutta Method, IMR, Symmetrisation

Abstract

In wave propagation phenomena, time-advancing numerical methods must accurately represent the amplitude and phase of the propagating waves. The acoustic waves are non-dispersive and non-dissipative. However, the standard schemes both retain dissipation and dispersion errors. Thus, this paper aims to analyse the dissipation, dispersion, accuracy, and stability of the Runge–Kutta method and derive a new scheme and algorithm that preserves the symmetry property. The symmetrised method is introduced in the time-of-finite-difference method  for solving problems in aeroacoustics. More efficient programming for solving acoustic problems in time and space, i.e. the IMR method for solving acoustic problems, an advection equation, compares the square-wave and step-wave Lax methods with symmetrised IMR (one-and two-step active). The results of conventional methods are usually unstable for hyperbolic problems. The forward time central space square equation is an unstable method with minimal usefulness, which can only study waves for short fractions of one oscillation period. Therefore, nonlinear instability and shock formation are controlled by numerical viscosities such as those discussed with the Lax method equation. The one- and two-step active symmetrised IMR methods are more efficient than the wave method.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

19-06-2022

Issue

Section

SI: Failure Analysis of Materials and Structures

Categories

How to Cite

Acoustic Analysis Using Symmetrised Implicit Midpoint Rule . (2022). Frattura Ed Integrità Strutturale, 16(61), 214-229. https://doi.org/10.3221/IGF-ESIS.61.14

Most read articles by the same author(s)