Anisotropic mesh adaptation is studied for linear finite element solution of
3D anisotropic diffusion problems. The M-uniform mesh approach is used, where
an anisotropic adaptive mesh is generated as a uniform one in the metric
specified by a tensor. In addition to mesh adaptation, preservation of the
maximum principle is also studied. Some new sufficient conditions for maximum
principle preservation are developed, and a mesh quality measure is defined to
server as a good indicator. Four different metric tensors are investigated: one
is the identity matrix, one focuses on minimizing an error bound, another one
on preservation of the maximum principle, while the fourth combines both.
Numerical examples show that these metric tensors serve their purposes.
Particularly, the fourth leads to meshes that improve the satisfaction of the
maximum principle by the finite element solution while concentrating elements
in regions where the error is large. Application of the anisotropic mesh
adaptation to fractured reservoir simulation in petroleum engineering is also
investigated, where unphysical solutions can occur and mesh adaptation can help
improving the satisfaction of the maximum principle.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figure