NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF RADIATIVE TRANSFER IN HETEROGENEOUS MATERIALS WITH A NULL-COLLISION MONTE CARLO ALGORITHM

Author(s):  
Priscila Sousa ◽  
Agnes DELMAS ◽  
Maxime Roger
Author(s):  
Philippe Villedieu ◽  
Olivier Simonin

Two-phase gas-droplet flows are involved in a lot of industrial applications, especially in the combustion field (Diesel engine, turbomachinery, rocket engine,…). Among all the characteristics of the spray, the droplet size distribution generally has a major influence on the global performances of the system and must be accurately taken into account in a numerical simulation code. This is a difficult task because the carrier gas flow is very often turbulent. Hence, droplets located in the vicinity of the same point may have different velocities and coalesce, leading at the end to a strong modification of the initial droplet size distribution. The first part of our contribution will be devoted to the presentation of a new kinetic model for droplet coalescence in turbulent gas flows. This model is an extension, to the case of sprays, of the ideas introduced by Simonin, Deutsch and Lavie´ville in [1]. The key ingredient is the use of the “joint density function”, fgp (t, x, r, v, u), representing the density of droplets at time t, located at point x, with radius r and velocity v and “viewing” an instantaneous turbulent gas velocity u. The great advantage of using fgp (t, x, r, v, u) instead of the usual density function fp (t, x, r, v) is the possibility to close the collision operator, in the governing kinetic equation, with less restrictive assumptions on the velocity correlations of two colliding droplets. The link between this model and the usual one (relying on the so-called “chaos assumption”) will be discussed. In the second part of our contribution, we shall present a new Monte-Carlo algorithm derived from our kinetic model. Numerical simulation results, for some academic test cases (homogeneous isotropic turbulence), will be shown and compared to the results obtained with a classical algorithm for droplet collision, based on the chaos assumption (see for example [2] or [3]). The figure 1 below shows a comparison between the temporal evolution of the mass mean radius computed by a classical collision model (neglecting the influence of gas and droplet velocity correlation) and by the “joint-pdf” based model. In the first case, the growth rate of the droplet, due to coalescence phenomena, is overestimated. Moreover, figure 2 shows that the droplet kinetic energy, induced by the turbulent gas motion, decays rapidly with the chaos assumption based model, as already noticed by Lavie´ville et al [1] in the case of solid particle collisions.


2022 ◽  
Vol 258 (1) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
Elad Steinberg ◽  
Shay I. Heizler

Abstract We present a new algorithm for radiative transfer—based on a statistical Monte Carlo approach—that does not suffer from teleportation effects, on the one hand, and yields smooth results, on the other hand. Implicit Monte Carlo (IMC) techniques for modeling radiative transfer have existed from the 1970s. When they are used for optically thick problems, however, the basic algorithm suffers from “teleportation” errors, where the photons propagate faster than the exact physical behavior, due to the absorption-blackbody emission processes. One possible solution is to use semianalog Monte Carlo, in its new implicit form (ISMC), which uses two kinds of particles, photons and discrete material particles. This algorithm yields excellent teleportation-free results, but it also produces noisier solutions (relative to classic IMC), due to its discrete nature. Here, we derive a new Monte Carlo algorithm, Discrete Implicit Monte Carlo (DIMC), which also uses the idea of two kinds of discrete particles, and thus does not suffer from teleportation errors. DIMC implements the IMC discretization and creates new radiation photons for each time step, unlike ISMC. Using the continuous absorption technique, DIMC yields smooth results like classic IMC. One of the main elements of the algorithm is the avoidance of the explosion of the particle population, by using particle merging. We test the new algorithm on 1D and 2D cylindrical problems, and show that it yields smooth, teleportation-free results. We finish by demonstrating the power of the new algorithm on a classic radiative hydrodynamic problem—an opaque radiative shock wave. This demonstrates the power of the new algorithm for astrophysical scenarios.


2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (7) ◽  
pp. 45-54
Author(s):  
A. M. Lepikhin ◽  
N. A. Makhutov ◽  
Yu. I. Shokin

The probabilistic aspects of multiscale modeling of the fracture of heterogeneous structures are considered. An approach combining homogenization methods with phenomenological and numerical models of fracture mechanics is proposed to solve the problems of assessing the probabilities of destruction of structurally heterogeneous materials. A model of a generalized heterogeneous structure consisting of heterogeneous materials and regions of different scales containing cracks and crack-like defects is formulated. Linking of scales is carried out using kinematic conditions and multiscale principle of virtual forces. The probability of destruction is formulated as the conditional probability of successive nested fracture events of different scales. Cracks and crack-like defects are considered the main sources of fracture. The distribution of defects is represented in the form of Poisson ensembles. Critical stresses at the tops of cracks are described by the Weibull model. Analytical expressions for the fracture probabilities of multiscale heterogeneous structures with multilevel limit states are obtained. An approach based on a modified Monte Carlo method of statistical modeling is proposed to assess the fracture probabilities taking into account the real morphology of heterogeneous structures. A feature of the proposed method is the use of a three-level fracture scheme with numerical solution of the problems at the micro, meso and macro scales. The main variables are generalized forces of the crack propagation and crack growth resistance. Crack sizes are considered generalized coordinates. To reduce the dimensionality, the problem of fracture mechanics is reformulated into the problem of stability of a heterogeneous structure under load with variations of generalized coordinates and analysis of the virtual work of generalized forces. Expressions for estimating the fracture probabilities using a modified Monte Carlo method for multiscale heterogeneous structures are obtained. The prospects of using the developed approaches to assess the fracture probabilities and address the problems of risk analysis of heterogeneous structures are shown.


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