Incompressible flow computations with stabilized bilinear and linear equal-order-interpolation velocity-pressure elements
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1187431
DOI10.1016/0045-7825(92)90141-6zbMath0756.76048MaRDI QIDQ1187431
Publication date: 13 August 1992
Published in: Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0045-7825(92)90141-6
cylinder; unsteady incompressible flows; steady-state equations; lid-driven cavity; Galerkin/least-squares formulation; quadrilateral and triangular elements; standing vortex problem
76D05: Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible viscous fluids
76M10: Finite element methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics
Related Items
Unnamed Item, Unnamed Item, Numerical aerodynamic analysis of large buildings using a finite element model with application to a telescope building, Aerodynamic Characteristics of Rectangular Cylinders, Stabilized finite element methods. I.: Application to the advective- diffusive model, A new strategy for finite element computations involving moving boundaries and interfaces --- The deforming-spatial-domain/space-time procedure. I: The concept and the preliminary numerical tests, Stabilized finite element methods. II: The incompressible Navier-Stokes equations, Finite element solution of the Stokes problem with dominating Coriolis force, Stabilized finite element method for the transient Navier-Stokes equations based on a pressure gradient projection, On stabilized finite element methods for linear systems of convection-diffusion-reaction equations, On stabilized finite element formulations for incompressible advective-diffusive transport and fluid flow problems, On the performance of high aspect ratio elements for incompressible flows, Finite element computation of unsteady viscous compressible flows, Numerical simulation of free surface flows, Stabilized finite element methods for singularly perturbed parabolic problems, Finite element solution strategies for large-scale flow simulations, Extension to three-dimensional problems of the upwind finite element scheme based on the choice of up- and downwind points, Massively parallel finite element computation of incompressible flows involving fluid-body interactions, Implementation of implicit finite element methods for incompressible flows on the CM-5, Massively parallel finite element simulation of compressible and incompressible flows, Stabilised finite element methods for steady incompressible flow, Stabilized finite element methods for the velocity-pressure-stress formulation of incompressible flows, Convergence analyses of Galerkin least-squares methods for symmetric advective-diffusive forms of the Stokes and incompressible Navier-Stokes equations, Unnamed Item, Unnamed Item, Unnamed Item, Unnamed Item, A Precise Computation of Drag Coefficients of a Sphere, Optimal Control in Navier-Stokes Equations
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A new finite element formulation for computational fluid dynamics. VIII. The Galerkin/least-squares method for advective-diffusive equations
- A new finite element formulation for computational fluid dynamics. V: Circumventing the Babuška-Brezzi condition: A stable Petrov-Galerkin formulation of the Stokes problem accommodating equal-order interpolations
- A new finite element formulation for computational fluid dynamics. VII. The Stokes problem with various well-posed boundary conditions: Symmetric formulations that converge for all velocity/pressure spaces
- Streamline upwind/Petrov-Galerkin formulations for convection dominated flows with particular emphasis on the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations
- Time-accurate incompressible flow computations with quadrilateral velocity-pressure elements
- Solution techniques for the vorticity–streamfunction formulation of two‐dimensional unsteady incompressible flows
- Petrov‐Galerkin methods on multiply connected domains for the vorticity‐stream function formulation of the incompressible Navier‐Stokes equations
- Incompressible flow computations based on the vorticity-stream function and velocity-pressure formulations