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Preventing numerical oscillations in the flux-split based finite difference method for compressible flows with discontinuities

  • Zhiwei He
  • , Yousheng Zhang
  • , Xinliang Li
  • , Li Li
  • , Baolin Tian*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • IAPCM
  • CAS - Institute of Mechanics

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In simulating compressible flows with contact discontinuities or material interfaces, numerical pressure and velocity oscillations can be induced by point-wise flux vector splitting (FVS) or component-wise nonlinear difference discretization of convection terms. The current analysis showed that the oscillations are due to the incompatibility of the point-wise splitting of eigenvalues in FVS and the inconsistency of component-wise nonlinear difference discretization among equations of mass, momentum, energy, and even fluid composition for multi-material flows. Two practical principles are proposed to prevent these oscillations: (i) convective fluxes must be split by a global FVS, such as the global Lax-Friedrichs FVS, and (ii) consistent discretization between different equations must be guaranteed. The latter, however, is not compatible with component-wise nonlinear difference discretization. Therefore, a consistent discretization method that uses only one set of common weights is proposed for nonlinear weighted essentially non-oscillatory (WENO) schemes. One possible procedure to determine the common weights is presented that provided good results. The analysis and methods stated above are appropriate for both single- (e.g., contact discontinuity) and multi-material (e.g., material interface) discontinuities. For the latter, however, the additional fluid composition equation should be split and discretized consistently for compatibility with the other equations. Numerical tests including several contact discontinuities and multi-material flows confirmed the effectiveness, robustness, and low computation cost of the proposed method.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)269-287
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Computational Physics
Volume300
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jul 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Compressible flows
  • Contact discontinuity
  • Finite difference method
  • Flux vector splitting
  • Material interface
  • Numerical oscillations
  • WENO

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