John B. Bell
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Adaptive numerical simulation of low Mach number combustion
Abstract:
Numerical simulation of reacting flows with comprehensive kinetics
is one of the most demanding areas of computational fluid dynamics.
High-fidelity modeling requires accurate fluid mechanics, detailed
models for multicomponent transport and detailed chemical mechanisms.
In this talk we describe methodology to simulate time-dependent
reacting flows in three dimensions.
This approach is based on a specialized form of the low Mach number
equations that conserves mass and energy.
The low Mach number equations, derived from asymptotic analysis,
are structurally similar to the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations.
Our basic computational approach uses a generalized projection formulation
that exploits this similarity.
The core discretization algorithm is
embedded in an adaptive projection framework that uses structured
hierarchical grids with subcycling in time. The discrete
conservation properties and second-order accuracy
of the underlying single-grid algorithm are preserved.
The adaptive framework is implemented using a software infrastructure
that supports distributed memory parallel architectures.
We illustrate the methodology on several examples of two- and
three-dimensional flames.
Zeit: | Friday,
April 12, 2002, 14.15 Uhr |
Ort: | FU Berlin, Arnimallee 2-6, Raum 032 im EG
|