Marc Josien

2papers

2 Papers

COMP-PHApr 14, 2017
Fourier-based numerical approximation of the Weertman equation for moving dislocations

Marc Josien, Yves-Patrick Pellegrini, Frédéric Legoll et al.

This work discusses the numerical approximation of a nonlinear reaction-advection-diffusion equation, which is a dimensionless form of the Weertman equation. This equation models steadily-moving dislocations in materials science. It reduces to the celebrated Peierls-Nabarro equation when its advection term is set to zero. The approach rests on considering a time-dependent formulation, which admits the equation under study as its long-time limit. Introducing a Preconditioned Collocation Scheme based on Fourier transforms, the iterative numerical method presented solves the time-dependent problem, delivering at convergence the desired numerical solution to the Weertman equation. Although it rests on an explicit time-evolution scheme, the method allows for large time steps, and captures the solution in a robust manner. Numerical results illustrate the efficiency of the approach for several types of nonlinearities.

39.7NAMay 20
Stable full-field simulation of a multiscale elliptic equation by means of Quantized Tensor Trains

Marc Josien, Anas El Hachimi, Isabelle Ramière

In this article, we design an original solver based on Quantized Tensor Trains (QTT) for linear elliptic equations with heterogeneous coefficient field, that allows for extremely fine meshes. It can achieve full-field simulations in dimensions $d=2$ and $d=3$ with a number of Degrees of Freedom (DoFs) up to $20$ orders of magnitude beyond the classical solvers, recovering accurately the solution as well as its gradient in the $\LL^2$ norm. For treating such an enormous amount of data, the solver crucially relies on the exponential compression properties of QTTs. This significantly improves upon the existing literature. The main ingredient of the proposed solver consists in the introduction of a penalization term involving the Helmholtz--Leray projector in the equation governing the gradient unknown. For practical reasons related to the expression of the Helmholtz--Leray projector, the penalized equation is solved in Fourier space. The primal solution is then obtained from the gradient via the Green operator. A core property of the solver is that it is unconditionally stable with respect to the mesh size. Based on numerical evidence supported by mathematical analysis, we show that reliable gradients and solutions can be obtained, and guaranteed by the proposed a posteriori error estimator. As an illustration, we successfully solve an elliptic equation in a microstructured material with up to $10^{37}$ virtual degrees of freedom in dimension $d=3$.