N25B-T033 TITLE: Hypersonic Computational Fluid Dynamics Heat Flux Sub-Models Development
OUSD (R&E) CRITICAL TECHNOLOGY AREA(S): Hypersonics
OBJECTIVE: Enhance Modeling and Simulation (M&S) of Navy-relevant hypersonic flows through the development and/or improvement of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) turbulence-heat flux sub-models.
DESCRIPTION: At present, CFD prediction of heat flux in hypersonic flows relies on simplified approximation of the relationship between fluid transport, turbulence, and heat flux. These models are not rooted in fundamental physics and are typically "tuned" to yield reasonable agreement with a select number of canonical sub- and transonic flows. Consequently, existing turbulence models can produce larger errors when attempting to predict heat flux for hypersonic flows.
The objective of this topic is to enhance M&S of Navy-relevant hypersonic flows through the development and/or improvement of CFD turbulence-heat flux sub-models. Proposers should define a framework for heat flux modeling of the Favre-averaged, reacting Navier-Stokes equations, develop a heat flux sub-model that can be easily integrated into existing RANS-based CFD solvers, and demonstrate the predictive capability of the model through verification and validation (V&V) against existing hypersonics datasets.
PHASE I: Develop and present a turbulence modeling framework based on the Favre-averaged, reacting Navier-Stokes equations. Provide a heat flux sub-model for hypersonic, turbulent flows that shows improvements in physical realism, predictive capability, and numerical performance/robustness over existing heat flux sub-models. Ideally, the model should be generalizable across flight conditions (i.e., subsonic to hypersonic). The functional form of the heat flux sub-model must be capable of seamless integration into existing compressible RANS and hybrid RANS/LES turbulence modeling frameworks, i.e., the model should take as inputs only those variables used/stored by industry-standard RANS/LES algorithms and their sub-models, be continuous in form, rely only on local data, and should ideally be turbulence model agnostic.
The Phase I effort will include prototype plans to be developed under Phase II.
PHASE II: Refine the form of the model(s) and define any constants needed to close the model. Constants and model specifics should be driven by a combination of first principles and existing experimental/flight test data. Collaborate with the High Performance Computing Modernization Program (HPCMP) CREATE Air Vehicle (CREATE-AV) development team to incorporate the model(s) into a CFD architecture, verify the model implementation, and validate the model against existing hypersonics databases using best V&V practices. Further refine the model form, constants, and implementation based on V&V activities. Finalize the heat flux sub-model by demonstrating model integration into an existing turbulence modeling framework plus improvements in predictive capability for Navy-relevant hypersonic flows, and transitioning the model to CREATE tools.
PHASE III DUAL USE APPLICATIONS: Transition the finalized model(s) along with all supporting documentation, rationale, and source code to the HPCMP CREATE development team for (1) implementation into its Kestrel CFD solver, (2) standard verification testing, and comparison to/validation against existing databases,. Complete any necessary alterations to the model or its source code requested by the HPCMP CREATE team.
Improved heat flux modeling will benefit commercial computational fluid dynamics solvers and commercial entities that utilize CFD for design and analysis. In addition to hypersonic systems, improved heat flux modeling will benefit commercial sectors producing turbomachinery, internal combustion engines, and other problems where heat transfer due to fluid-solid-interaction plays an important role in design, performance, and sustainment.
REFERENCES:
KEYWORDS: Hypersonic; Turbulence Modeling; Heat Flux; Computational Fluid Dynamics; CFD; Heat Transfer; Modeling and Simulation; M&S
TPOC 1: Daniel Fritsch
(301) 757-1843
[email protected]TPOC 2: Charles Lynch
(301) 342-8549
[email protected]
** TOPIC NOTICE ** |
The Navy Topic above is an "unofficial" copy from the Navy Topics in the DoD 25.B STTR BAA. Please see the official DoD Topic website at www.dodsbirsttr.mil/submissions/solicitation-documents/active-solicitations for any updates. The DoD issued its Navy 25.B STTR Topics pre-release on April 2, 2025 which opens to receive proposals on April 23, 2025, and closes May 21, 2025 (12:00pm ET). Direct Contact with Topic Authors: During the pre-release period (April 2, 2025, through April 22, 2025) proposing firms have an opportunity to directly contact the Technical Point of Contact (TPOC) to ask technical questions about the specific BAA topic. The TPOC contact information is listed in each topic description. Once DoD begins accepting proposals on April 23, 2025 no further direct contact between proposers and topic authors is allowed unless the Topic Author is responding to a question submitted during the Pre-release period. DoD On-line Q&A System: After the pre-release period, until May 7, 2025, at 12:00 PM ET, proposers may submit written questions through the DoD On-line Topic Q&A at https://www.dodsbirsttr.mil/submissions/login/ by logging in and following instructions. In the Topic Q&A system, the questioner and respondent remain anonymous but all questions and answers are posted for general viewing. DoD Topics Search Tool: Visit the DoD Topic Search Tool at www.dodsbirsttr.mil/topics-app/ to find topics by keyword across all DoD Components participating in this BAA.
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