Abstract
AbstractUnderstanding the dynamics of phase boundaries in fluids requires quantitative knowledge about the microscale processes at the interface. We consider the sharp-interface motion of the compressible two-component flow and propose a heterogeneous multiscale method (HMM) to describe the flow fields accurately. The multiscale approach combines a hyperbolic system of balance laws on the continuum scale with molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations on the microscale level. Notably, the multiscale approach is necessary to compute the interface dynamics because there is—at present—no closed continuum-scale model. The basic HMM relies on a moving-mesh finite-volume method and has been introduced recently for the compressible one-component flow with phase transitions by Magiera and Rohde in (J Comput Phys 469: 111551, 2022). To overcome the numerical complexity of the MD microscale model, a deep neural network is employed as an efficient surrogate model. The entire approach is finally applied to simulate droplet dynamics for argon-methane mixtures in several space dimensions. To our knowledge, such compressible two-phase dynamics accounting for microscale phase-change transfer rates have not yet been computed.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference43 articles.
1. Alkämper, M., Magiera, J.: Interface preserving moving mesh (Code). DaRUS (2021). https://doi.org/10.18419/darus-1671
2. Allen, M.P., Tildesley, D.J.: Computer Simulation of Liquids, 2nd edn. Oxford University Press Inc, Oxford (2017)
3. Anderson, D.M., McFadden, G.B., Wheeler, A.A.: Diffuse-interface methods in fluid mechanics. Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 30(1), 139–165 (1998)
4. Andrianov, N., Warnecke, G.: The Riemann problem for the Baer-Nunziatio model of two-phase flows. J. Comput. Phys. 195, 434–464 (2004)
5. Berthelot, D.: Sur le mélange des gaz. Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l’Académie des Sciences 126, 1703–1706 (1898)