Title of article :
High-order multi-implicit spectral deferred correction methods for problems of reactive flow
Author/Authors :
Anne Bourlioux، نويسنده , , Anne and Layton، نويسنده , , Anita T. and Minion، نويسنده , , Michael L.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Models for reacting flow are typically based on advection–diffusion–reaction (A–D–R) partial differential equations. Many practical cases correspond to situations where the relevant time scales associated with each of the three sub-processes can be widely different, leading to disparate time-step requirements for robust and accurate time-integration. In particular, interesting regimes in combustion correspond to systems in which diffusion and reaction are much faster processes than advection. The numerical strategy introduced in this paper is a general procedure to account for this time-scale disparity. The proposed methods are high-order multi-implicit generalizations of spectral deferred correction methods (MISDC methods), constructed for the temporal integration of A–D–R equations. Spectral deferred correction methods compute a high-order approximation to the solution of a differential equation by using a simple, low-order numerical method to solve a series of correction equations, each of which increases the order of accuracy of the approximation. The key feature of MISDC methods is their flexibility in handling several sub-processes implicitly but independently, while avoiding the splitting errors present in traditional operator-splitting methods and also allowing for different time steps for each process. The stability, accuracy, and efficiency of MISDC methods are first analyzed using a linear model problem and the results are compared to semi-implicit spectral deferred correction methods. Furthermore, numerical tests on simplified reacting flows demonstrate the expected convergence rates for MISDC methods of orders three, four, and five. The gain in efficiency by independently controlling the sub-process time steps is illustrated for nonlinear problems, where reaction and diffusion are much stiffer than advection. Although the paper focuses on this specific time-scales ordering, the generalization to any ordering combination is straightforward.
Keywords :
Operator Splitting , Semi-implicit methods , Reactive flows , Spectral deferred correction methods , Advection–diffusion–reaction equation
Journal title :
Journal of Computational Physics
Journal title :
Journal of Computational Physics