Table of Contents
Fetching ...

Adaptive finite volume-particle method for free surface flows

Jiawang Zhang, Fengxiang Zhao, Kun Xu

Abstract

This study proposes a novel adaptive finite volume-particle method (AFVPM) for accurate and efficient free surface flow simulations. The proposed AFVPM synergistically combines the Eulerian finite volume method (FVM) on unstructured meshes with the Lagrangian smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) approach. Specifically, the mesh-based FVM is employed in the bulk flow regions to leverage its computational efficiency and numerical accuracy, while a weakly compressible SPH formulation is applied in the vicinity of the interface to maintain robust free-surface tracking capabilities. A key innovation of this framework is a block-based dynamic and adaptive conversion strategy between Eulerian mesh regions and Lagrangian particle regions and a buffer region-based cell-particle algorithm is designed to ensure seamless data communication across the Eulerian mesh-Lagrangian particle interface. Furthermore, isothermal gas-kinetic scheme (GKS) incorporating gravitational effects is utilized to calculate the fluxes in the mesh regions. The performance and reliability of the proposed AFVPM are validated through a series of benchmark cases that involve complex free surface phenomena. Numerical results demonstrate that AFVPM achieves superior accuracy and efficiency compared to full SPH approaches.

Adaptive finite volume-particle method for free surface flows

Abstract

This study proposes a novel adaptive finite volume-particle method (AFVPM) for accurate and efficient free surface flow simulations. The proposed AFVPM synergistically combines the Eulerian finite volume method (FVM) on unstructured meshes with the Lagrangian smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) approach. Specifically, the mesh-based FVM is employed in the bulk flow regions to leverage its computational efficiency and numerical accuracy, while a weakly compressible SPH formulation is applied in the vicinity of the interface to maintain robust free-surface tracking capabilities. A key innovation of this framework is a block-based dynamic and adaptive conversion strategy between Eulerian mesh regions and Lagrangian particle regions and a buffer region-based cell-particle algorithm is designed to ensure seamless data communication across the Eulerian mesh-Lagrangian particle interface. Furthermore, isothermal gas-kinetic scheme (GKS) incorporating gravitational effects is utilized to calculate the fluxes in the mesh regions. The performance and reliability of the proposed AFVPM are validated through a series of benchmark cases that involve complex free surface phenomena. Numerical results demonstrate that AFVPM achieves superior accuracy and efficiency compared to full SPH approaches.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 19 sections, 46 equations, 19 figures, 2 tables, 1 algorithm.

Figures (19)

  • Figure 1: Domain partition of AFVPM
  • Figure 2: Conversion of buffer and real particles: buffer particles are converted to real particles when entering particle regions and new buffer particles are generated
  • Figure 3: Conversion from interface-air blocks to interface-mesh blocks: interface-air blocks are converted to interface-mesh blocks when far from the free surface
  • Figure 4: Pressure distribution of still tank problem
  • Figure 5: Numerical results of dam breaking problem at $T = 1.7, 2, 4.8, 6.2, 7.4$. Left column: pressure, right column: mesh-particle partitions (red: mesh region, blue: particle region)
  • ...and 14 more figures