scholarly journals Performance Analyses of IDEAL Algorithm on Highly Skewed Grid System

2014 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 813510
Author(s):  
Dongliang Sun ◽  
Jinliang Xu ◽  
Peng Ding

IDEAL is an efficient segregated algorithm for the fluid flow and heat transfer problems. This algorithm has now been extended to the 3D nonorthogonal curvilinear coordinates. Highly skewed grids in the nonorthogonal curvilinear coordinates can decrease the convergence rate and deteriorate the calculating stability. In this study, the feasibility of the IDEAL algorithm on highly skewed grid system is analyzed by investigating the lid-driven flow in the inclined cavity. It can be concluded that the IDEAL algorithm is more robust and more efficient than the traditional SIMPLER algorithm, especially for the highly skewed and fine grid system. For example, at θ = 5° and grid number = 70 × 70 × 70, the convergence rate of the IDEAL algorithm is 6.3 times faster than that of the SIMPLER algorithm, and the IDEAL algorithm can converge almost at any time step multiple.

2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (07) ◽  
pp. 1149-1155
Author(s):  
T. S. LEE ◽  
Y. P. CHENG ◽  
H. T. LOW

In this paper, the updating of the intermediate velocity in the correction stage in SIMPLE-like algorithms on staggered grid is discussed in detail, based on the discussion CLEARER algorithm that is extended from the non-staggered grid to the staggered grid. The performance of SIMPLER and CLEARER algorithms are compared using two numerical examples with reliable solutions. The results show that CLEARER can predict the numerical results as accurately as SIMPLER, and it can also enhance the convergence rate greatly under low under-relaxation factors. In some cases CLEARER algorithm can only need 27% of iteration number required by SIMPLER to reach the same convergence criterion.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (5) ◽  
pp. 812-819 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Lee ◽  
Y. F. Chen

The NAPPLE algorithm for incompressible viscous flow on Cartesian grid system is extended to nonorthogonal curvilinear grid system in this paper. A pressure-linked equation is obtained by substituting the discretized momentum equations into the discretized continuity equation. Instead of employing a velocity interpolation such as pressure-weighted interpolation method (PWIM), a particular approximation is adopted to circumvent the checkerboard error such that the solution does not depend on the under-relaxation factor. This is a distinctive feature of the present method. Furthermore, the pressure is directly solved from the pressure-linked equation without recourse to a pressure-correction equation. In the use of the NAPPLE algorithm, solving the pressure-linked equation is as simple as solving a heat conduction equation. Through two well-documented examples, performance of the NAPPLE algorithm is validated for both buoyancy-driven and pressure-driven flows.


The impedance Cardiography (ICG) assists the impedance occurred in the heart. The ICG also known as Thoracic Electro Bio-Impedance (TEB).This projects various flexible and mathematical reduced adaptive methods to visualize the extreme clear TEB modules. In the medical premises, TEB wave notifies the several physiological and non-physiological incidents, that covers small characteristics which are predominant for finding the volume of the stroke. In addition, mathematical difficulty is a significant constraint to novel healthcare observing tool. Therefore, the paper project novel wave working methods for TEB improvement in isolated arrangements. So that we selected higher preference adaptive eliminator as a fundamental constituent in the procedure. To recover the original signal, convergence rate, to minimize mathematical difficulty of the wave working method, we relate the data normalization to extract the ideal wave. The projected realizations are simulated with practical TEB waves. At last, outcomes proves projected extracted normalized higher order filter is appropriate to realistic medical arrangement.


2007 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 463-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. P. Cheng ◽  
T. S. Lee ◽  
H. T. Low ◽  
W. Q. Tao

2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (07) ◽  
pp. 979-1004
Author(s):  
CLAUDIO ALBANESE

Bidirectional valuation models are based on numerical methods to obtain kernels of parabolic equations. Here we address the problem of robustness of kernel calculations vis a vis floating point errors from a theoretical standpoint. We are interested in kernels of one-dimensional diffusion equations with continuous coefficients as evaluated by means of explicit discretization schemes of uniform step h > 0 in the limit as h → 0. We consider both semidiscrete triangulations with continuous time and explicit Euler schemes with time step so small that the Courant condition is satisfied. We find uniform bounds for the convergence rate as a function of the degree of smoothness. We conjecture these bounds are indeed sharp. The bounds also apply to the time derivatives of the kernel and its first two space derivatives. The proof is constructive and is based on a new technique of path conditioning for Markov chains and a renormalization group argument. We make the simplifying assumption of time-independence and use longitudinal Fourier transforms in the time direction. Convergence rates depend on the degree of smoothness and Hölder differentiability of the coefficients. We find that the fastest convergence rate is of order O(h2) and is achieved if the coefficients have a bounded second derivative. Otherwise, explicit schemes still converge for any degree of Hölder differentiability except that the convergence rate is slower. Hölder continuity itself is not strictly necessary and can be relaxed by an hypothesis of uniform continuity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Meilan Qiu ◽  
Dewang Li ◽  
Yanyun Wu

Fractional partial differential equations with time-space fractional derivatives describe some important physical phenomena. For example, the subdiffusion equation (time order 0<α<1) is more suitable to describe the phenomena of charge carrier transport in amorphous semiconductors, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) diffusometry in percolative, Rouse, or reptation dynamics in polymeric systems, the diffusion of a scalar tracer in an array of convection rolls, or the dynamics of a bead in a polymeric network, and so on. However, the superdiffusion case (1<α<2) is more accurate to depict the special domains of rotating flows, collective slip diffusion on solid surfaces, layered velocity fields, Richardson turbulent diffusion, bulk-surface exchange controlled dynamics in porous glasses, the transport in micelle systems and heterogeneous rocks, quantum optics, single molecule spectroscopy, the transport in turbulent plasma, bacterial motion, and even for the flight of an albatross (for more physical applications of fractional sub-super diffusion equations, one can see Metzler and Klafter in 2000). In this work, we establish two fully discrete numerical schemes for solving a class of nonlinear time-space fractional subdiffusion/superdiffusion equations by using backward Euler difference 1<α<2 or second-order central difference 1<α<2/local discontinuous Galerkin finite element mixed method. By introducing the mathematical induction method, we show the concrete analysis for the stability and the convergence rate under the L2 norm of the two LDG schemes. In the end, we adopt several numerical experiments to validate the proposed model and demonstrate the features of the two numerical schemes, such as the optimal convergence rate in space direction is close to Ohk+1. The convergence rate in time direction can arrive at Oτ2−α when the fractional derivative is 0<α<1. If the fractional derivative parameter is 1<α<2 and we choose the relationship as h=C′τ (h denotes the space step size, C′ is a constant, and τ is the time step size), then the time convergence rate can reach to Oτ3−α. The experiment results illustrate that the proposed method is effective in solving nonlinear time-space fractional subdiffusion/superdiffusion equations.


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