Periodic Reporting for period 1 - HO2PF (High-order two-phase flow modelling)
Période du rapport: 2022-02-01 au 2024-01-31
This project was concerned with initiating a shift in the way two-phase flows can be accurately simulated and predicted using computing resources, leveraging the development of a new "high-order" numerical framework. Owing to its high order, the proposed numerical framework exhibits unprecedented convergence properties, i.e. an enhanced ability to produce increasingly better results as more computational resources are thrown at the problem at hand. Notably, this framework is the first of its kind ever to be able to simulate two-phase flows while both exactly conserving the mass of fluid and producing a convergent estimation of the surface-tension force distribution that acts at the interface between the two phases. This was made possible by applying one main conceptual change to the start-of-the-art, that is the replacement of planar local approximations of the interface by curved (quadratic) ones for numerically solving the governing equations of the flow. The superior performance of the newly developed framework has been demonstrated with canonical and physically realistic test-cases of two-phase flows.
(1) A numerical algorithm for calculating the first geometrical moments (i.e. the volume and barycenter) of any arbitrary polyhedron that is cut by a curved "paraboloid" surface. In order to be a viable toolbox for the numerical simulation of large-scale cases of two-phase flows, this calculation must be exact, robust, and very fast -- three criteria that our proposed algorithm satisfies. This algorithm constitutes the fundamental building block of the proposed numerical framework. We have implemented it in the C++ language and made it available to the research community under the open-source MPL-2 license.
(2) A numerical algorithm for solving the spatio-temporal evolution of the two fluid phases based on piecewise-parabolic interface approximations. We have shown that this new method converges with third-order accuracy, instead of the second-order accuracy of the state-of-the-art, meaning that our proposed method reduces errors faster than the state-of-the-art.
(3) A numerical algorithm for reconstructing parabolic interface approximations from geometrical moments and for estimating the corresponding curvature of the interface, which is a quantity that must be known to estimate the surface-tension force distribution acting on the interface. We have shown that this enables unprecedented convergence and accuracy of the surface-tension estimation, resulting in more accurate and stable simulations of two-phase flows.
These three main developments and their application to two-phase flow problems have been presented at 6 international conferences and 6 invited seminar talks, and have directly led to 2 peer-reviewed journal publications and 1 peer-reviewed conference proceedings publication.