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Failure of Anisotropic Unstructured Mesh Adaption Based on Multidimensional Residual Minimization
Author(s) -
William A. Wood,
William L. Kleb
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
17th aiaa computational fluid dynamics conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2003-3824
Subject(s) - stencil , computer science , robustness (evolution) , residual , solver , mathematical optimization , laminar flow , grid , classification of discontinuities , mesh generation , regular grid , discretization , algorithm , mechanics , geometry , mathematics , mathematical analysis , computational science , physics , biochemistry , chemistry , gene , thermodynamics , finite element method
An automated anisotropic unstructured mesh adaptation strategy is proposed, implemented, and assessed for the discretization of viscous flows. The adaption criteria is based upon the minimization of the residual fluctuations of a multidimensional upwind viscous flow solver. For scalar advection, this adaption strategy has been shown to use fewer grid points than gradient based adaption, naturally aligning mesh edges with discontinuities and characteristic lines. The adaption utilizes a compact stencil and is local in scope, with four fundamental operations: point insertion, point deletion, edge swapping, and nodal displacement. Evaluation of the solution-adaptive strategy is performed for a two-dimensional blunt body laminar wind tunnel case at Mach 10. The results demonstrate that the strategy suffers from a lack of robustness, particularly with regard to alignment of the bow shock in the vicinity of the stagnation streamline. In general, constraining the adaption to such a degree as to maintain robustness results in negligible improvement to the solution. Because the present method fails to consistently or significantly improve the flow solution, it is rejected in favor of simple uniform mesh refinement.

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