COMP-PHCENANADec 6, 2015

A post-processing technique for stabilizing the discontinuous pressure projection operator in marginally-resolved incompressible inviscid flow

arXiv:1512.0175521 citationsh-index: 23
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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For researchers using discontinuous element methods in environmental fluid mechanics, this post-processing technique addresses a numerical instability issue in under-resolved simulations.

The paper develops a post-processing technique for velocity after pressure projection to stabilize under-resolved inviscid flow simulations in discontinuous element methods. The method improves smoothness and reduces divergence, keeping simulations stable longer than non-post-processed fields.

A method for post-processing the velocity after a pressure projection is developed that helps to maintain stability in an under-resolved, inviscid, discontinuous element-based simulation for use in environmental fluid mechanics process studies. The post-processing method is needed because of spurious divergence growth at element interfaces due to the discontinuous nature of the discretization used. This spurious divergence eventually leads to a numerical instability. Previous work has shown that a discontinuous element-local projection onto the space of divergence-free basis functions is capable of stabilizing the projection method, but the discontinuity inherent in this technique may lead to instability in under-resolved simulations. By enforcing inter-element discontinuity and requiring a divergence-free result in the weak sense only, a new post-processing technique is developed that simultaneously improves smoothness and reduces divergence in the pressure-projected velocity field at the same time. When compared against a non-post-processed velocity field, the post-processed velocity field remains stable far longer and exhibits better smoothness and conservation properties.

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