Abstract
AbstractIn this work we investigate the Brinkman volume penalization technique in
the context of a high-order Discontinous Galerkin method to model moving wall boundaries
for compressible fluid flow simulations. High-order approximations are especially of
interest as they require few degrees of freedom to represent smooth solutions
accurately. This reduced memory consumption is attractive on modern computing systems
where the memory bandwidth is a limiting factor. Due to their low dissipation and
dispersion they are also of particular interest for aeroacoustic problems. However, a
major problem for the high-order discretization is the appropriate representation of
wall geometries. In this work we look at the Brinkman penalization technique, which
addresses this problem and allows the representation of geometries without modifying the
computational mesh. The geometry is modelled as an artificial porous medium and embedded
in the equations. As the mesh is independent of the geometry with this method, it is not
only well suited for high-order discretizations but also for problems where the
obstacles are moving. We look into the deployment of this strategy by briefly discussing
the Brinkman penalization technique and its application in our solver and investigate
its behavior in fundamental one-dimensional setups, such as shock reflection at a moving
wall and the formation of a shock in front of a piston. This is followed by the
application to setups with two and three dimensions, illustrating the method in the
presence of curved surfaces.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Engineering (miscellaneous),Modeling and Simulation
Reference28 articles.
1. Alexander R. Diagonally implicit runge-kutta methods for stiff
O.D.E.’s. SIAM J Numer Anal. 1977;14(6):1006–21. https://doi.org/10.1137/0714068.
2. Anand N, Ebrahimi Pour N, Klimach H, Roller S. Utilization of the
brinkman penalization to represent geometries in a high-order discontinuous galerkin
scheme on octree meshes. Symmetry. 2019;11(9):1126. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym11091126.
3. Ben-Dor G, Igra O, Elperin T, editors. Handbook of shock waves, vol. 3.
1st ed. San Diego: Academic Press; 2000.
4. Brown-Dymkoski E, Kasimov N, Vasilyev OV. A characteristic based volume
penalization method for general evolution problems applied to compressible viscous
flows. J Comput Phys. 2014;262:344–57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcp.2013.12.060.
5. E. Arquis JC. Sur les conditions hydrodynamiques au voisinage
d’une interface milieu fluide-milieu poreux: application a‘ la
convection naturelle. C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris II 299; 1984, p. 1–4.