Stabilised dG-FEM for incompressible natural convection flows with boundary and moving interior layers on non-adapted meshes

arXiv:1610.0556528 citations
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For researchers in computational thermo-fluid dynamics, this work provides a robust and efficient numerical method for natural convection problems, though it is an incremental improvement over existing stabilised DG methods.

The paper introduces heavily grad-div and pressure jump stabilised discontinuous Galerkin finite element methods for incompressible natural convection flows, demonstrating accurate handling of boundary and moving interior layers on coarse, non-adapted meshes, with improved mass conservation and overall accuracy.

This paper presents heavily grad-div and pressure jump stabilised, equal- and mixed-order discontinuous Galerkin finite element methods for non-isothermal incompressible flows based on the Oberbeck-Boussinesq approximation. In this framework, the enthalpy-porosity model for multiphase flow in melting and solidification problems can be employed. By considering the differentially heated cavity and the melting of pure gallium in a rectangular enclosure, it is shown that both boundary layers and sharp moving interior layers can be handled naturally by the proposed class of non-conforming methods. Due to the stabilising effect of the grad-div term and the robustness of discontinuous Galerkin methods, it is possible to solve the underlying problems accurately on coarse, non-adapted meshes. The interaction of heavy grad-div stabilisation and discontinuous Galerkin methods significantly improves the mass conservation properties and the overall accuracy of the numerical scheme which is observed for the first time. Hence, it is inferred that stabilised discontinuous Galerkin methods are highly robust as well as computationally efficient numerical methods to deal with natural convection problems arising in incompressible computational thermo-fluid dynamics.

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