Björn Liljegren-Sailer

2papers

2 Papers

NAApr 11, 2017
On structure-preserving model reduction for damped wave propagation in transport networks

Herbert Egger, Thomas Kugler, Björn Liljegren-Sailer et al.

We consider the discretization and subsequent model reduction of a system of partial differential-algebraic equations describing the propagation of pressure waves in a pipeline network. Important properties like conservation of mass, dissipation of energy, passivity, existence of steady states, and exponential stability can be preserved by an appropriate semi-discretization in space via a mixed finite element method and also during the further dimension reduction by structure preserving Galerkin projection which is the main focus of this paper. Krylov subspace methods are employed for the construciton of the reduced models and we discuss modifications needed to satisfy certain algebraic compatibility conditions; these are required to ensure the well-posedness of the reduced models and the preservation of the key properties. Our analysis is based on the underlying infinite dimensional problem and its Galerkin approximations. The proposed algorithms therefore have a direct interpretation in function spaces; in principle, they are even applicable directly to the original system of partial differential-algebraic equations while the intermediate discretization by finite elements is only required for the actual computations. The performance of the proposed methods is illustrated with numerical tests and the necessity for the compatibility conditions is demonstrated by examples.

NADec 10, 2018
Stability preserving approximations of a semilinear hyperbolic gas transport model

Herbert Egger, Thomas Kugler, Björn Liljegren-Sailer

We consider the discretization of a semilinear damped wave equation arising, for instance, in the modeling of gas transport in pipeline networks. For time invariant boundary data, the solutions of the problem are shown to converge exponentially fast to steady states. We further prove that this decay behavior is inherited uniformly by a class of Galerkin approximations, including finite element, spectral, and structure preserving model reduction methods. These theoretical findings are illustrated by numerical tests.