Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form

Abstract Accuracy of unstructured finite volume discretization is greatly influenced by the gradient reconstruction. For the commonly used k-exact reconstruction method, the cell centroid is always chosen as the reference point to formulate the reconstructed function. But in some practical problems,...

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Main Authors: Lingfa Kong, Yidao Dong, Wei Liu, Huaibao Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-11-01
Series:Advances in Aerodynamics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42774-020-00048-5
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spelling doaj-1a451e5be2b04b37a49690a003ef98592020-11-25T04:01:05ZengSpringerOpenAdvances in Aerodynamics2524-69922020-11-012114310.1186/s42774-020-00048-5Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral formLingfa Kong0Yidao Dong1Wei Liu2Huaibao Zhang3College of Aerospace Science and Engineering, National University of Defense TechnologyCollege of Aerospace Science and Engineering, National University of Defense TechnologyCollege of Aerospace Science and Engineering, National University of Defense TechnologySchool of Physics, Sun Yat-sen UniversityAbstract Accuracy of unstructured finite volume discretization is greatly influenced by the gradient reconstruction. For the commonly used k-exact reconstruction method, the cell centroid is always chosen as the reference point to formulate the reconstructed function. But in some practical problems, such as the boundary layer, cells in this area are always set with high aspect ratio to improve the local field resolution, and if geometric centroid is still utilized for the spatial discretization, the severe grid skewness cannot be avoided, which is adverse to the numerical performance of unstructured finite volume solver. In previous work [Kong, et al. Chin Phys B 29(10):100203, 2020], we explored a novel global-direction stencil and combined it with the face-area-weighted centroid on unstructured finite volume methods from differential form to realize the skewness reduction and a better reflection of flow anisotropy. Greatly inspired by the differential form, in this research, we demonstrate that it is also feasible to extend this novel method to the unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form on both second and third-order finite volume solver. Numerical examples governed by linear convective, Euler and Laplacian equations are utilized to examine the correctness as well as effectiveness of this extension. Compared with traditional vertex-neighbor and face-neighbor stencils based on the geometric centroid, the grid skewness is almost eliminated and computational accuracy as well as convergence rate is greatly improved by the global-direction stencil with face-area-weighted centroid. As a result, on unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form, the method also has superiorities on both computational accuracy and convergence rate.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42774-020-00048-5Unstructured finite volume methodsk-exact reconstruction algorithmGlobal-direction stencilGrid skewnessFace-area-weighted centroid
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lingfa Kong
Yidao Dong
Wei Liu
Huaibao Zhang
spellingShingle Lingfa Kong
Yidao Dong
Wei Liu
Huaibao Zhang
Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
Advances in Aerodynamics
Unstructured finite volume methods
k-exact reconstruction algorithm
Global-direction stencil
Grid skewness
Face-area-weighted centroid
author_facet Lingfa Kong
Yidao Dong
Wei Liu
Huaibao Zhang
author_sort Lingfa Kong
title Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
title_short Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
title_full Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
title_fullStr Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
title_full_unstemmed Extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
title_sort extending the global-direction stencil with “face-area-weighted centroid” to unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form
publisher SpringerOpen
series Advances in Aerodynamics
issn 2524-6992
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Accuracy of unstructured finite volume discretization is greatly influenced by the gradient reconstruction. For the commonly used k-exact reconstruction method, the cell centroid is always chosen as the reference point to formulate the reconstructed function. But in some practical problems, such as the boundary layer, cells in this area are always set with high aspect ratio to improve the local field resolution, and if geometric centroid is still utilized for the spatial discretization, the severe grid skewness cannot be avoided, which is adverse to the numerical performance of unstructured finite volume solver. In previous work [Kong, et al. Chin Phys B 29(10):100203, 2020], we explored a novel global-direction stencil and combined it with the face-area-weighted centroid on unstructured finite volume methods from differential form to realize the skewness reduction and a better reflection of flow anisotropy. Greatly inspired by the differential form, in this research, we demonstrate that it is also feasible to extend this novel method to the unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form on both second and third-order finite volume solver. Numerical examples governed by linear convective, Euler and Laplacian equations are utilized to examine the correctness as well as effectiveness of this extension. Compared with traditional vertex-neighbor and face-neighbor stencils based on the geometric centroid, the grid skewness is almost eliminated and computational accuracy as well as convergence rate is greatly improved by the global-direction stencil with face-area-weighted centroid. As a result, on unstructured finite volume discretization from integral form, the method also has superiorities on both computational accuracy and convergence rate.
topic Unstructured finite volume methods
k-exact reconstruction algorithm
Global-direction stencil
Grid skewness
Face-area-weighted centroid
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42774-020-00048-5
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