The MINI mixed finite element for the Stokes problem: An experimental investigation
For researchers in computational fluid dynamics, this work provides experimental evidence of higher-order convergence beyond theoretical guarantees, potentially improving accuracy in Stokes flow simulations.
The paper experimentally investigates super-convergence of order 1.5 in pressure and velocity for the Stokes problem discretized with the MINI mixed finite element, finding that this super-convergence may extend to unstructured triangulations, and compares the approximating properties of the complete computed velocity versus its piecewise-linear part.
Super-convergence of order 1.5 in pressure and velocity has been experimentally investigated for the two-dimensional Stokes problem discretised with the MINI mixed finite element. Even though the classic mixed finite element theory for the MINI element guarantees linear convergence for the total error, recent theoretical results indicate that super-convergence of order 1.5 in pressure and of the linear part of the computed velocity to the piecewise linear nodal interpolation of the exact velocity is in fact possible with structured, three-directional triangular meshes. The numerical experiments presented here suggest a more general validity of super-convergence of order 1.5, possibly to automatically generated and unstructured triangulations. In addition, the approximating properties of the complete computed velocity have been compared with the approximating properties of the piecewise-linear part of the computed velocity, finding that the former is generally closer to the exact velocity, whereas the latter conserves mass better.