Linearly decoupled energy-stable numerical methods for multi-component two-phase compressible flow
Provides the first linear, decoupled, energy-stable schemes for multi-component two-phase compressible flow, addressing a computational bottleneck in simulating realistic fluid systems.
Proposed two linear, decoupled, energy-stable numerical schemes for multi-component two-phase compressible flow with realistic equations of state, using scalar auxiliary variable approaches. The methods are proven to preserve unconditional energy dissipation and verified through numerical results.
In this paper, for the first time we propose two linear, decoupled, energy-stable numerical schemes for multi-component two-phase compressible flow with a realistic equation of state (e.g. Peng-Robinson equation of state). The methods are constructed based on the scalar auxiliary variable (SAV) approaches for Helmholtz free energy and the intermediate velocities that are designed to decouple the tight relationship between velocity and molar densities. The intermediate velocities are also involved in the discrete momentum equation to ensure the consistency with the mass balance equations. Moreover, we propose a component-wise SAV approach for a multi-component fluid, which requires solving a sequence of linear, separate mass balance equations. We prove that the methods preserve the unconditional energy-dissipation feature. Numerical results are presented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed methods.