## Abstract A Lagrangian finite element algorithm is described for solving twoβdimensional, timeβdependent free surface flows, in which moving contact lines are simulated by allowing local slip and the use of a βTanner Lawβ. The method is implemented using structured meshes, which are locally refin
Numerical Simulation of Moving Contact Line Problems Using a Volume-of-Fluid Method
β Scribed by Michael Renardy; Yuriko Renardy; Jie Li
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 188 KB
- Volume
- 171
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9991
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Moving contact lines are implemented in a volume-of-fluid scheme with piecewise linear interface construction. Interfacial tension is treated as a continuous body force, computed from numerical derivatives of a smoothed volume-of-fluid function. Two methods for implementing the contact angle condition are investigated. The first extrapolates the volume-of-fluid function beyond the flow domain, on the basis of the condition that its gradient is perpendicular to the interface and that the normal to the interface at the wall is determined by the contact angle. The second method treats the problem as a three-phase situation and mimics the classical argument of Young. It is found that the latter approach introduces an artificial localized flow, and the extrapolation method is preferable. Slip is a crucial factor in the spreading of contact lines; the numerical method introduces slip at the discrete level, effectively introducing a slip length on the order of the mesh size.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The dynamic response of submarine pipelines to earthquake-generated vertical seabed motions is examined with the aid of a finite element model. A relaxation algorithm is adopted in order to overcome the problem of unknown dynamic seabed reaction forces. Rotational rigidity is assumed at the boundary
This paper describes the parallel implementation of a numerical model for the simulation of problems from fluid dynamics on distributed memory multiprocessors. The basic procedure is to apply a fully explicit upwind finite difference approximation on a staggered grid. A theoretical time complexity a
The paper investigates the viability of using moving mesh methods to simulate travelling wave solutions of Fisher's equation. Results are presented that illustrate the weaknesses in moving mesh methods based on equidistribution of some popular monitor functions. It is shown that knowledge of the dif
Impacts of rigid spherical nose shaped missiles on concrete beams are simulated with a discrete element method. The history of the structural damage of the beam is followed from the very first crushing and fracturing processes to the ultimate fragmentation step. Spalling, scabbing, penetration and p