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A projection method for motion of triple junctions by level sets
Author(s) -
Kurt A. Smith,
Francisco J. Solis,
David L. Chopp
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
interfaces and free boundaries mathematical analysis computation and applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.964
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1463-9971
pISSN - 1463-9963
DOI - 10.4171/ifb/61
Subject(s) - level set method , level set (data structures) , projection (relational algebra) , function (biology) , set (abstract data type) , manifold (fluid mechanics) , projection method , phase (matter) , motion (physics) , point (geometry) , mathematics , mathematical analysis , topology (electrical circuits) , space (punctuation) , phase space , reduction (mathematics) , computer science , physics , algorithm , geometry , dykstra's projection algorithm , classical mechanics , combinatorics , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics) , engineering , biology , operating system , quantum mechanics , evolutionary biology , thermodynamics , programming language , mechanical engineering , image segmentation
We develop a projection method to treat the motion of multiple junctions (such as contact lines) in the level set formulation. Multiple junctions are relevant to many fields including fluid dynamics, foams, and semiconductor manufacture. In the level set method an interface is defined as the zero level set of a smooth function. For an N -phase system the location of all interfaces can be specified by N − 1 functions (hence only one level set function is needed for a two-phase system). For N > 2 we describe a symmetric projection of the N level set functions onto an N −1 dimensional manifold. This reduction in phase space eliminates unacceptable values of the level set functions (such as cases where more than one is positive at a given point.) This prevents the formation of vacuums or overlaps at multiple junctions during interface evolution. Further, this method can be applied to any number of phases and spatial dimensions. We present twoand three-dimensional results showing that the method gives correct equilibrium contact angles and produces accurate dynamics in multi-phase fluids.

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