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A large‐scale parallel hybrid grid generation technique for realistic complex geometry
Author(s) -
Zhao Zhong,
Zhang Yang,
He Lei,
Chang Xinghua,
Zhang Laiping
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal for numerical methods in fluids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1097-0363
pISSN - 0271-2091
DOI - 10.1002/fld.4825
Subject(s) - grid , computational science , mesh generation , computer science , computational fluid dynamics , parallel computing , bottleneck , lift (data mining) , preprocessor , basis (linear algebra) , scale (ratio) , algorithm , geometry , mathematics , finite element method , mechanics , artificial intelligence , physics , quantum mechanics , thermodynamics , data mining , embedded system
Summary High‐Performance Computing (HPC) systems and Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) have made significant progress in recent years; however, as the basis of the large‐scale parallel computing, the massive grid generation of billions of cells has become a bottleneck problem. In this study, a parallel grid generation technique is proposed to generate large‐scale mixed grids with arbitrary cell types and scales. The basic idea of our method is analogous to the global mesh refinement technique. An initial coarse grid with arbitrary cell types is regarded as a background mesh which is partitioned into subzones, and subzones are assigned onto different CPU cores. After the cells and faces in each subzone are split, the inserted new points of the solid wall are projected onto the original CAD entities to preserve the geometry accurately. Finally, the tangled cells caused by the projection in the boundary layer are untangled by a local Radial Basis Function mesh deformation technique. Furthermore, a parallel partition approach and an efficient wall distance computing technique for massive grids are developed also to shorten the preprocessing time. The tests show that the preprocessing efficiency has been increased by two or three orders compared with traditional methods. Billions of grids are generated for the AIAA JSM high‐lift model and the Chinese CHN‐T1 transport model to test the ability of the parallel grid generation technique. The maximum scale up to 19 billion mixed elements is generated using 16 384 CPU cores in parallel, and the mesh quality is acceptable for CFD simulations.