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==1 Title, abstract and keywords<!-- Your document should start with a concise and informative title. Titles are often used in information-retrieval systems. Avoid abbreviations and formulae where possible. Capitalize the first word of the title.
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Published in ''Computers and Structures'' Vol. 83 (17-18), pp. 1459-1475, 2005<br />
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doi: 10.1016/j.compstruc.2004.10.021
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== Abstract ==
  
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A method is presented for the solution of an incompressible viscous fluid flow with heat transfer using a fully Lagrangian description of the motion. Due to the severe element distortion, a frequent remeshing is performed in an efficient manner. An implicit time integration through a classical fractional step is presented. The non-linearities of the formulation are taken into account and solved with the fixed-point iteration method. The displacement and temperature solutions are coupled through the Boussinesq approximation. The Lagrangian formulation provides an elegant way of solving free-surface problems with thermal convection as the particles are followed during their motion. To illustrate the method, the Rayleigh–Bénard instability with and without free surface in two dimensions has been computed.
  
An abstract is required for every document; it should succinctly summarize the reason for the work, the main findings, and the conclusions of the study. Abstract is often presented separately from the article, so it must be able to stand alone. For this reason, references and hyperlinks should be avoided. If references are essential, then cite the author(s) and year(s). Also, non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided, but if essential they must be defined at their first mention in the abstract itself. -->==
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<pdf>Media:Draft_Samper_755341558_6983_1-s2.0-S0045794905000751-main.pdf</pdf>
 
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==2 The main text<!-- You can enter and format the text of this document by selecting the ‘Edit’ option in the menu at the top of this frame or next to the title of every section of the document. This will give access to the visual editor. Alternatively, you can edit the source of this document (Wiki markup format) by selecting the ‘Edit source’ option.
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2.1 Subsections
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For tabular summations that do not deserve to be presented as a table, lists are often used. Lists may be either numbered or bulleted. Below you see examples of both.
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1. The first entry in this list
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You may choose to number equations for easy referencing. In that case they must be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals in parentheses on the right hand side of the page. Below is an example of formulae that should be referenced as eq. (1].
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Supplementary material can be inserted to support and enhance your article. This includes video material, animation sequences, background datasets, computational models, sound clips and more. In order to ensure that your material is directly usable, please provide the files with a preferred maximum size of 50 MB. Please supply a concise and descriptive caption for each file. -->==
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==3 Bibliography<!--
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Citations in text will follow a citation-sequence system (i.e. sources are numbered by order of reference so that the first reference cited in the document is [1], the second [2], and so on) with the number of the reference in square brackets. Once a source has been cited, the same number is used in all subsequent references. If the numbers are not in a continuous sequence, use commas (with no spaces) between numbers. If you have more than two numbers in a continuous sequence, use the first and last number of the sequence joined by a hyphen
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Revision as of 14:17, 10 January 2019

Published in Computers and Structures Vol. 83 (17-18), pp. 1459-1475, 2005
doi: 10.1016/j.compstruc.2004.10.021

Abstract

A method is presented for the solution of an incompressible viscous fluid flow with heat transfer using a fully Lagrangian description of the motion. Due to the severe element distortion, a frequent remeshing is performed in an efficient manner. An implicit time integration through a classical fractional step is presented. The non-linearities of the formulation are taken into account and solved with the fixed-point iteration method. The displacement and temperature solutions are coupled through the Boussinesq approximation. The Lagrangian formulation provides an elegant way of solving free-surface problems with thermal convection as the particles are followed during their motion. To illustrate the method, the Rayleigh–Bénard instability with and without free surface in two dimensions has been computed.

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Published on 01/01/2005

DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruc.2004.10.021
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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