Isogeometric suitable coupling methods for partitioned multiphysics simulation with application to fluid–structure interaction
J. Li (TU Delft - Numerical Analysis)
Hugo M. Verhelst (Università di Pavia)
Henk den Besten (TU Delft - Ship and Offshore Structures)
Matthias Möller (TU Delft - Numerical Analysis)
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Abstract
This paper presents spline-based coupling methods for partitioned multiphysics simulations, specifically designed for isogeometric analysis (IGA) based solvers. Traditional vertex-based coupling approaches face significant challenges when applied to IGA solvers, including geometric accuracy issues, interpolation errors, and substantial communication overhead. The methodology draws on the IGA mathematical framework to deliver coupling solutions that preserve the high-order continuity and exact geometric representation of splines. We develop two complementary strategies: (1) a spline-vertex coupling method that enables efficient interaction between IGA and conventional solvers, and (2) a fully isogeometric coupling approach that maximizes accuracy for IGA-to-IGA communication. Both theoretical analysis and extensive numerical experiments demonstrate that our spline-based methods significantly reduce communication overhead compared to traditional approaches while simultaneously enhancing geometric accuracy through exact boundary representation and maintaining higher-order solution continuity across the coupled interfaces. We quantitatively confirm the communication efficiency benefits through systematic measurements of both transfer times and data volumes across various mesh refinement levels, with experimental results closely aligning with our theoretical predictions. Our benchmark studies further demonstrate the geometric fidelity advantages through exact boundary representation, while also highlighting how the inherent mathematical structure of splines naturally preserves solution derivatives across interfaces without requiring additional computation or specialized transfer algorithms. This work not only provides efficient coupling strategies tailored to IGA-based solvers but also establishes a practical bridge between IGA and traditional discretization methods in partitioned multiphysics simulations. By offering viable options for coupling conventional solvers with IGA-based components, our approach enables broader adoption of IGA in established simulation workflows while ensuring accurate and high-performance interface communications.