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Seminar: Reduced-Order Model Framework for Thermochemical Non-equilibrium Hypersonic Flows, Feb. 11

Robyn Macdonald

Dr. Robyn Macdonald - Post-Doctoral Research Fellow
Computational Hypersonics Research Lab, University of Minnesota
Monday, Feb. 11, 2019 | DLC | 12:00 P.M.
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Abstract: The study of vehicles traveling at hypersonic speeds is extremely complex and involves many non-equilibrium physical phenomena occurring on broad time and length scales. For gas 铿俹w around a hypersonic vehicle, non-equilibrium energy transfer and chemistry of the gas particles directly a铿ects heat transfer to the vehicle. Work focused on modeling this type of 铿俹w铿乪ld has been hindered by inaccurate physical and chemical models. For example, the conventional approach widely used today was developed nearly 40 years ago and relies heavily on calibration with heritage data.

Recent advances in computational chemistry and computational resources have enabled the construction of extremely detailed models for the chemical non-equilibrium e铿ects based on ab initio quantum chemistry data, called the state-to-state (StS) approach. Unfortunately, due to enormous cost, StS calculations can only be used in highly simpli铿乪d test cases. This motivates the development of reduced order models for chemical non-equilibrium which can capture the essential physics at a massively lower cost. The model reduction framework proposed is based on the maximum-entropy principle, and leverages quasi-classical trajectory (i.e., atomistic) calculations to compute n-moment kinetic data for a reduced set of molecular states, thus providing the crucial link between the ab initio quantum chemistry data and computational 铿倁id dynamics (CFD). The talk covers the key aspects involved in model development, namely: the model reduction framework, the use of scattering calculations to integrate the ab initio data, and application of the model to CFD. Key 铿乶dings and their implication on vehicle design are discussed.

Bio: Dr. Robyn Macdonald received her BS in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) in 2013. In December 2018, she successfully defended her PhD thesis 鈥淩educed-order model framework for thermochemical non-equilibrium hypersonic 铿俹ws.鈥 Her PhD research focused on development of quantum chemistry informed reduced order models for thermochemical non-equilibrium hypersonic 铿俹ws. She is currently a post-doctoral research fellow at the Computational Hypersonics Research Lab at the University of Minnesota studying turbulence in hypersonic 铿俹ws.

Dr. Macdonald is recipient of a National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship, and her post-doctoral research is supported by the President鈥檚 Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. During her PhD she received a number of awards: including the NASA Space Technology Research Fellowship (declined to accept NDSEG), Zonta Amelia Earhart Fellowship (declined to accept NDSEG), and AE Faculty Outstanding Graduate Student Award from the Dept. of Aerospace Engineering at UIUC. Her work on reduced order models for thermochemical non-equilibrium was awarded the Weaver Thermophysics Best Student Paper Award from AIAA and was selected as Editor鈥檚 Pick when published in the Journal of Chemical Physics.