학술논문

High-order implicit RBF-based differential quadrature-finite volume method on unstructured grids: application to inviscid and viscous compressible flows.
Document Type
Journal
Author
Liu, Y. Y. (SGP-SING-ME) AMS Author Profile; Shu, C. (SGP-SING-ME) AMS Author Profile; Yang, L. M. (PRC-NAA-ADE) AMS Author Profile; Liu, Y. G. (SGP-SING-ME) AMS Author Profile; Liu, W. (SGP-SING-ME) AMS Author Profile; Zhang, Z. L. (SGP-SING-ME) AMS Author Profile
Source
Journal of Computational Physics (J. Comput. Phys.) (20230101), 478, Paper No 111962, 22~pp. ISSN: 0021-9991 (print).eISSN: 1090-2716.
Subject
65 Numerical analysis -- 65M Partial differential equations, initial value and time-dependent initial-boundary value problems
  65M08 Finite volume methods

76 Fluid mechanics -- 76M Basic methods in fluid mechanics
  76M12 Finite volume methods
Language
English
Abstract
Summary: ``This paper exploits the potential of a high-order implicit radial basis function-based differential quadrature-finite volume (IRBFDQ-FV) method for effective simulation of inviscid and viscous compressible flows using unstructured grids. The framework of IRBFDQ-FV method is based on finite volume discretization which can guarantee conservation of mass, momentum and energy. The flow field variables within each control cell are represented by a fourth-order approximation constructed by a Taylor series expansion to the cell center with spatial derivatives as the undetermined coefficients. All spatial derivatives are computed by the meshless and highly converged RBF-based differential quadrature (RBFDQ) technique. Regarding flux evaluation, the discrete gas-kinetic flux solver is applied to evaluate inviscid and viscous fluxes simultaneously for compressible viscous flows. Resultantly, the special mathematical treatment for the viscous flux, which is usually adopted in other high-order methods, can be avoided. A point extrema-based extended bounds (PEEB) shock-capturing limiter is introduced to eliminate spurious numerical oscillations near discontinuities. Due to the implicit nature of the proposed method, implicit time-stepping schemes compatible with the spatial accuracy are devised to efficiently solve the resulting discretized equations. Representative compressible flow problems are simulated to verify the high-order accuracy, excellent efficiency and robustness of the present method. Comparison with two other high-order finite volume methods further shows competitiveness of the present method in solving compressible flow problems on unstructured grids.''