An adaptive multifluid interface-capturing method for compressible flow in complex geometries
Author(s) -
Jeffrey Greenough,
V E Beckner,
Richard B. Pember,
William Y. Crutchfield,
John B. Bell,
Phillip Colella
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
14th computational fluid dynamics conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1995-1718
Subject(s) - volume of fluid method , cartesian coordinate system , godunov's scheme , adaptive mesh refinement , integrator , mesh generation , computer science , interface (matter) , discretization , mathematics , regular grid , flow (mathematics) , grid , mechanics , computational science , geometry , numerical analysis , mathematical analysis , physics , finite element method , bubble , maximum bubble pressure method , computer network , bandwidth (computing) , thermodynamics
We present a numerical method for solving the multifluid equations of gas dynamics using an operator-split second-order Godunov method for flow in complex geometries in two and three dimensions. The multifluid system treats the fluid components as thermodynamically distinct entities and correctly models fluids with different compressibilities. This treatment allows a general equation-of-state (EOS) specification and the method is implemented so that the EOS references are minimized. The current method is complementary to volume-of-fluid (VOF) methods in the sense that a VOF representation is used, but no interface reconstruction is performed. The Godunov integrator captures the interface during the solution process. The basic multifluid integrator is coupled to a Cartesian grid algorithm that also uses a VOF representation of the fluid-body interface. This representation of the fluid-body interface allows the algorithm to easily accommodate arbitrarily complex geometries. The resulting single grid multifluid-Cartesian grid integration scheme is coupled to a local adaptive mesh refinement algorithm that dynamically refines selected regions of the computational grid to achieve a desired level of accuracy. The overall method is fully conservative with respect to the total mixture. The method will be used for a simple nozzle problem in two-dimensional axisymmetric coordinates.
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