7,519 research outputs found
Scalable explicit implementation of anisotropic diffusion with Runge-Kutta-Legendre super-time-stepping
An important ingredient in numerical modelling of high temperature magnetised
astrophysical plasmas is the anisotropic transport of heat along magnetic field
lines from higher to lower temperatures.Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) typically
involves solving the hyperbolic set of conservation equations along with the
induction equation. Incorporating anisotropic thermal conduction requires to
also treat parabolic terms arising from the diffusion operator. An explicit
treatment of parabolic terms will considerably reduce the simulation time step
due to its dependence on the square of the grid resolution () for
stability. Although an implicit scheme relaxes the constraint on stability, it
is difficult to distribute efficiently on a parallel architecture. Treating
parabolic terms with accelerated super-time stepping (STS) methods has been
discussed in literature but these methods suffer from poor accuracy (first
order in time) and also have difficult-to-choose tuneable stability parameters.
In this work we highlight a second order (in time) Runge Kutta Legendre (RKL)
scheme (first described by Meyer et. al. 2012) that is robust, fast and
accurate in treating parabolic terms alongside the hyperbolic conversation
laws. We demonstrate its superiority over the first order super time stepping
schemes with standard tests and astrophysical applications. We also show that
explicit conduction is particularly robust in handling saturated thermal
conduction. Parallel scaling of explicit conduction using RKL scheme is
demonstrated up to more than processors.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, incorporated comments from the referee. This
version is now accepted for publication in MNRA
A conservative implicit multirate method for hyperbolic problems
This work focuses on the development of a self adjusting multirate strategy
based on an implicit time discretization for the numerical solution of
hyperbolic equations, that could benefit from different time steps in different
areas of the spatial domain. We propose a novel mass conservative multirate
approach, that can be generalized to various implicit time discretization
methods. It is based on flux partitioning, so that flux exchanges between a
cell and its neighbors are balanced. A number of numerical experiments on both
non-linear scalar problems and systems of hyperbolic equations have been
carried out to test the efficiency and accuracy of the proposed approach
High Order Cell-Centered Lagrangian-Type Finite Volume Schemes with Time-Accurate Local Time Stepping on Unstructured Triangular Meshes
We present a novel cell-centered direct Arbitrary-Lagrangian-Eulerian (ALE)
finite volume scheme on unstructured triangular meshes that is high order
accurate in space and time and that also allows for time-accurate local time
stepping (LTS). The new scheme uses the following basic ingredients: a high
order WENO reconstruction in space on unstructured meshes, an element-local
high-order accurate space-time Galerkin predictor that performs the time
evolution of the reconstructed polynomials within each element, the computation
of numerical ALE fluxes at the moving element interfaces through approximate
Riemann solvers, and a one-step finite volume scheme for the time update which
is directly based on the integral form of the conservation equations in
space-time. The inclusion of the LTS algorithm requires a number of crucial
extensions, such as a proper scheduling criterion for the time update of each
element and for each node; a virtual projection of the elements contained in
the reconstruction stencils of the element that has to perform the WENO
reconstruction; and the proper computation of the fluxes through the space-time
boundary surfaces that will inevitably contain hanging nodes in time due to the
LTS algorithm. We have validated our new unstructured Lagrangian LTS approach
over a wide sample of test cases solving the Euler equations of compressible
gasdynamics in two space dimensions, including shock tube problems, cylindrical
explosion problems, as well as specific tests typically adopted in Lagrangian
calculations, such as the Kidder and the Saltzman problem. When compared to the
traditional global time stepping (GTS) method, the newly proposed LTS algorithm
allows to reduce the number of element updates in a given simulation by a
factor that may depend on the complexity of the dynamics, but which can be as
large as 4.7.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figure
Segregated Runge–Kutta time integration of convection-stabilized mixed finite element schemes for wall-unresolved LES of incompressible flows
In this work, we develop a high-performance numerical framework for the large eddy simulation (LES) of incompressible flows. The spatial discretization of the nonlinear system is carried out using mixed finite element (FE) schemes supplemented with symmetric projection stabilization of the convective term and a penalty term for the divergence constraint. These additional terms introduced at the discrete level have been proved to act as implicit LES models. In order to perform meaningful wall-unresolved simulations, we consider a weak imposition of the boundary conditions using a Nitsche’s-type scheme, where the tangential component penalty term is designed to act as a wall law. Next, segregated Runge–Kutta (SRK) schemes (recently proposed by the authors for laminar flow problems) are applied to the LES simulation of turbulent flows. By the introduction of a penalty term on the trace of the acceleration, these methods exhibit excellent stability properties for both implicit and explicit treatment of the convective terms. SRK schemes are excellent for large-scale simulations, since they reduce the computational cost of the linear system solves by splitting velocity and pressure computations at the time integration level, leading to two uncoupled systems. The pressure system is a Darcy-type problem that can easily be preconditioned using a traditional block-preconditioning scheme that only requires a Poisson solver. At the end, only coercive systems have to be solved, which can be effectively preconditioned by multilevel domain decomposition schemes, which are both optimal and scalable. The framework is applied to the Taylor–Green and turbulent channel flow benchmarks in order to prove the accuracy of the convection-stabilized mixed FEs as LES models and SRK time integrators. The scalability of the preconditioning techniques (in space only) has also been proven for one step of the SRK scheme for the Taylor–Green flow using uniform meshes. Moreover, a turbulent flow around a NACA profile is solved to show the applicability of the proposed algorithms for a realistic problem.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
A locally adaptive time-stepping algorithm for\ud petroleum reservoir simulations
An algorithm for locally adapting the step-size for large scale finite volume simulations of multi-phase flow in petroleum reservoirs is suggested which allows for an “all-in-one” implicit calculation of behaviour over a very large time scale. Some numerical results for simple two-phase flow in one space dimension illustrate the promise of the algorithm, which has also been applied to very simple 3D cases. A description of the algorithm is presented here along with early results. Further development of the technique is hoped to facilitate useful scaling properties
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