Abstract:
A 3D technique for modeling high-speed shock-wave interaction of solid deformable
bodies with large displacements and deformations in Euler variables is being developed.
The numerical technique is based on the use of a modified Godunov scheme of increased
accuracy and Euler-Lagrangian multigrid algorithms. The solution of the elastic problem
of discontinuity decay for a spatial stress-strain state is used, which depends on time and
provides the second order of approximation in time and space in the region of smooth solutions. Three types of computational grids are used for each interacting body with an
explicit Lagrangian selection of movable free and contact surfaces. The first type is a Lagrangian surface grid in the form of a continuous set of triangles, which is used both to
set the initial geometry of a rigid body and to accompany it during the calculation process, and two types of three-dimensional volumetric grids: a basic Cartesian fixed grid for
each body, and auxiliary movable local Euler-Lagrangian grids associated with each triangle of the surface grid. The results of testing the methodology and modeling the processes of high-speed impact interaction of bodies and deep penetration of deformable impactors into elastic-plastic barriers are presented.