Numerical study of adaptive mesh refinement applied to a third order minimum truncation error Active Flux method

Master Thesis (2018)
Author(s)

Jeroen Kunnen (TU Delft - Aerospace Engineering)

Contributor(s)

Marc Gerritsma – Mentor

Stefan Hickel – Graduation committee member

Matthias Möller – Graduation committee member

Faculty
Aerospace Engineering
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Graduation Date
23-07-2018
Awarding Institution
Delft University of Technology
Programme
['Aerospace Engineering']
Faculty
Aerospace Engineering
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Abstract

In 2011 a relatively new type of numerical scheme has been introduced: Active Flux schemes. In this type of scheme an extra degree of freedom is added to the cell interfaces of a regular finite volume grid. This enables the use of non-conservative update methods for these additional variables, as conservation is automatically adhered to by the cell integral values. This increases the order of accuracy of the scheme, while allowing a broader range of update methods. This thesis proposes a new update method based on minimizing the truncation error of a Taylor series expansion. This way, a linear update scheme can be created for each unique stencil. An adaptive mesh refinement algorithm is implemented to conform the mesh to local high-frequency phenomena such as shock waves. A high-resolution simulation shows that the adaptive method reaches error levels of a uniform mesh while using ~9.6 times less computational cells.

Files

Thesis.pdf
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