Improving accuracy of volume penalised fluid-solid interactions
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2124874
DOI10.1016/j.jcp.2020.110043OpenAlexW2922568636MaRDI QIDQ2124874
Eric W. Hester, Keaton J. Burns, Geoffrey M. Vasil
Publication date: 11 April 2022
Published in: Journal of Computational Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1903.11914
fluid-solid interactionfictitious-domain methodimproved convergencedisplacement lengthmultiple-scales matched-asymptoticsvolume-penalty method
Basic methods in fluid mechanics (76Mxx) Fluid mechanics (76-XX) Incompressible viscous fluids (76Dxx)
Related Items (1)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A volume penalization method for incompressible flows and scalar advection-diffusion with moving obstacles
- Translation of J. D. van der Waals' ``The thermodynamic theory of capillarity under the hypothesis of a continuous variation of density
- Approximation of the Laplace and Stokes operators with Dirichlet boundary conditions through volume penalization: a spectral viewpoint
- A pseudo-spectral method with volume penalisation for magnetohydrodynamic turbulence in confined domains
- A DLM/FD method for fluid/flexible-body interactions
- Numerical simulation of fluid-structure interaction with the volume penalization method
- A Fourier spectral method for the Navier-Stokes equations with volume penalization for moving solid obstacles
- A rapidly converging phase field model
- Analysis of the diffuse-domain method for solving PDEs in complex geometries
- Solving PDEs in complex geometries: a diffuse domain approach
- An analysis of a phase field model of a free boundary
- Development of the mask method for incompressible unsteady flows
- Numerical analysis of blood flow in the heart
- A penalization method to take into account obstacles in incompressible viscous flows
- Nektar++: an open-source spectral/\(hp\) element framework
- Fourier embedded domain methods: Extending a function defined on an irregular region to a rectangle so that the extension is spatially periodic and \(C^{\infty}\)
- Modeling a no-slip flow boundary with an external force field
- Calculation of two-phase Navier-Stokes flows using phase-field modeling
- A fictitious domain method for Dirichlet problem and applications
- Volume penalization for inhomogeneous Neumann boundary conditions modeling scalar flux in complicated geometry
- Higher-order accurate diffuse-domain methods for partial differential equations with Dirichlet boundary conditions in complex, evolving geometries
- Analysis and discretization of the volume penalized Laplace operator with Neumann boundary conditions
- Analysis of the diffuse domain method for second order elliptic boundary value problems
- A note on the convergence analysis of a diffuse-domain approach
- A direct-forcing fictitious domain method for particulate flows
- An immersed boundary method with direct forcing for the simulation of particulate flows
- Boundary layer for a penalization method for viscous incompressible flow
- \textit{Semtex}: a spectral element-Fourier solver for the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations in cylindrical or Cartesian coordinates
- FluSI: A Novel Parallel Simulation Tool for Flapping Insect Flight Using a Fourier Method with Volume Penalization
- IMMERSED BOUNDARY METHODS
- The immersed boundary method
- Stefan and Hele-Shaw type models as asymptotic limits of the phase-field equations
- High-Order Methods for Incompressible Fluid Flow
- Smoothed Boundary Method for Diffusion-Related Partial Differential Equations in Complex Geometries
- DIFFUSE-INTERFACE METHODS IN FLUID MECHANICS
- Free Energy of a Nonuniform System. I. Interfacial Free Energy
- Spectral/hp Element Methods for Computational Fluid Dynamics
- The partial differential equation ut + uux = μxx
- On a quasi-linear parabolic equation occurring in aerodynamics
- Computation of turbulent flow past an array of cylinders using a spectral method with Brinkman penalization
- A fictitious domain approach to the direct numerical simulation of incompressible viscous flow past moving rigid bodies: application to particulate flow.
This page was built for publication: Improving accuracy of volume penalised fluid-solid interactions