domains are considered [11]. Also the application of adaptive techniques is complicated and only recently such pro- The principal idea of the present work consists in using the entropy balance equation in its discrete form as a rationale for con-cedures have been successfully used in FD computation
Finite element simulation of compressible particle-laden gas flows
β Scribed by Marcel Gurris; Dmitri Kuzmin; Stefan Turek
- Book ID
- 104006817
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 603 KB
- Volume
- 233
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0377-0427
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β¦ Synopsis
meshes Implicit high-resolution schemes a b s t r a c t A macroscopic two-fluid model of compressible particle-laden gas flows is considered. The governing equations are discretized by a high-resolution finite element method based on algebraic flux correction. A multidimensional limiter of TVD type is employed to constrain the local characteristic variables for the continuous gas phase and conservative fluxes for a suspension of solid particles. Special emphasis is laid on the efficient computation of steady state solutions at arbitrary Mach numbers. To avoid stability restrictions and convergence problems, the characteristic boundary conditions are imposed weakly and treated in a fully implicit manner. A two-way coupling via the interphase drag force is implemented using operator splitting. The Douglas-Rachford scheme is found to provide a robust treatment of the interphase exchange terms within the framework of a fractional-step solution strategy. Two-dimensional simulation results are presented for a moving shock wave and for a steady nozzle flow.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Semi-implicit and Newton-like finite element methods are developed for the stationary compressible Euler equations. The Galerkin discretization of the inviscid fluxes is potentially oscillatory and unstable. To suppress numerical oscillations, the spatial discretization is performed by a high-resolu