Multiphase Allen-Cahn and Cahn-Hilliard Models and Their Discretizations with the Effect of Pairwise Surface Tensions
For researchers in multiphase flow and materials science, this work provides rigorous mathematical foundations and numerical methods for N-phase models with pairwise surface tensions, but the results are incremental extensions of existing two-phase methods.
The paper establishes mathematical properties (unisolvent and symmetric positive-definite) of the coefficient matrix in N-phase Allen-Cahn and Cahn-Hilliard models with pairwise surface tensions, and derives finite element discretizations that preserve energy laws. Numerical experiments demonstrate the effect of pairwise surface tensions on spinodal decomposition and triple junctions.
In this paper, the mathematical properties and numerical discretizations of multiphase models that simulate the phase separation of an $N$-component mixture are studied. For the general choice of phase variables, the unisolvent property of the coefficient matrix involved in the $N$-phase models based on the pairwise surface tensions is established. Moreover, the symmetric positive-definite property of the coefficient matrix on an $(N-1)$-dimensional hyperplane --- which is of fundamental importance to the well-posedness of the models --- can be proved equivalent to some physical condition for pairwise surface tensions. The $N$-phase Allen-Cahn and $N$-phase Cahn-Hilliard equations can then be derived from the free-energy functional. A natural property is that the resulting dynamics of concentrations are independent of phase variables chosen. Finite element discretizations for $N$-phase models can be obtained as a natural extension of the existing discretizations for the two-phase model. The discrete energy law of the numerical schemes can be proved and numerically observed under some restrictions pertaining to time step size. Numerical experiments including the spinodal decomposition and the evolution of triple junctions are described in order to investigate the effect of pairwise surface tensions.