TY - JOUR
T1 - Adaptive unstructured volume remeshing-II: Applications to two- and three-dimensional levelset simulations of multiphase flow
AU - Lowengrub, John
AU - Zheng, Xiaoming
PY - 2005/9/20
Y1 - 2005/9/20
N2 - In Part I [Adaptive unstructured volume remeshing – I: The method, J. Comput. Phys., in press], we presented an adaptive remeshing algorithm that automatically adjusts the size of the elements of meshes of unstructured triangles (2D) and unstructured tetrahedra (3D) with time and position in the computational domain in order to efficiently resolve the relevant physical scales. Here, we illustrate the performance of an implementation of the algorithm in finite-element/level-set simulations of deformable droplet and fluid–fluid interface interactions, breakup and coalescence in multiphase flows. The wide range of length scales characterizing the dynamics are accurately resolved as demonstrated by comparison to experiments and to theoretical and sharp-interface (boundary-integral) numerical results. The computational cost is found to be competitive even with respect to boundary-integral methods. For the first time using an interface-capturing (level-set) method we successfully simulate the inertia driven impact and rebound of a liquid droplet from a liquid interface and find agreement with recent experimental results.
AB - In Part I [Adaptive unstructured volume remeshing – I: The method, J. Comput. Phys., in press], we presented an adaptive remeshing algorithm that automatically adjusts the size of the elements of meshes of unstructured triangles (2D) and unstructured tetrahedra (3D) with time and position in the computational domain in order to efficiently resolve the relevant physical scales. Here, we illustrate the performance of an implementation of the algorithm in finite-element/level-set simulations of deformable droplet and fluid–fluid interface interactions, breakup and coalescence in multiphase flows. The wide range of length scales characterizing the dynamics are accurately resolved as demonstrated by comparison to experiments and to theoretical and sharp-interface (boundary-integral) numerical results. The computational cost is found to be competitive even with respect to boundary-integral methods. For the first time using an interface-capturing (level-set) method we successfully simulate the inertia driven impact and rebound of a liquid droplet from a liquid interface and find agreement with recent experimental results.
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0021999105001233
M3 - Article
VL - 208
SP - 626
EP - 650
JO - Journal of Computational Physics/Elsevier
JF - Journal of Computational Physics/Elsevier
IS - 2
ER -