scholarly journals An Algorithm for the Navier-Stokes Problem

2006 ◽  
Vol Volume 5, Special Issue TAM... ◽  
Author(s):  
F.Z. Nouri ◽  
K. Amoura

International audience This study is a continuation of the one done in [7],[8] and [9] which are based on the work, first derived by Glowinski et al. in [3] and [4] and also Bernardi et al. [1] and [2]. Here, we propose an Algorithm to solve a nonlinear problem rising from fluid mechanics. In [7], we have studied Stokes problem by adapting Glowinski technique. This technique is userful as it decouples the pressure from the velocity during the resolution of the Stokes problem. In this paper, we extend our study to show that this technique can be used in solving a nonlinear problem such as the Navier Stokes equations. Numerical experiments confirm the interest of this discretisation. Cette étude est la continuation des travaux [7],[8] et [9] qui sont basés sur l'étude faite par Glowinski et al. [3] et [4] ainsi que Bernardi et al. (voir [1] et [2]). Ici nous proposons un Algorithme pour résoudre un problème non-linéaire issu de la mécanique des fluides. Dans [7] nous avons étudié le problème de Stokes en adaptant la technique de Glowinski, grace à aquelle, on peut découpler la pression de la vitesse lors de la résolution du problème de Stokes. Dans ce travail, nous étendons notre étude et montrons que cette technique peut être utilisée dans la résolution d'un probème non-linéaire comme les quations de Navier Stokes. Des tests numériques confirment l'intérêt de la discrétisation.

1994 ◽  
Vol 271 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Y. Huang ◽  
Jimmy Feng ◽  
Daniel D. Joseph

We do a direct two-dimensional finite-elment simulation of the Navier–Stokes equations and compute the forces which turn an ellipse settling in a vertical channel of viscous fluid in a regime in which the ellipse oscillates under the action of vortex shedding. Turning this way and that is induced by large and unequal values of negative pressure at the rear separation points which are here identified with the two points on the back face where the shear stress vanishes. The main restoring mechanism which turns the broadside of the ellipse perpendicular to the fall is the high pressure at the ‘stagnation point’ on the front face, as in potential flow, which is here identified with the one point on the front face where the shear stress vanishes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 715-735
Author(s):  
Yueqiang Shang ◽  
Jin Qin

AbstractBased on two-grid discretization, a simplified parallel iterative finite element method for the simulation of incompressible Navier-Stokes equations is developed and analyzed. The method is based on a fixed point iteration for the equations on a coarse grid, where a Stokes problem is solved at each iteration. Then, on overlapped local fine grids, corrections are calculated in parallel by solving an Oseen problem in which the fixed convection is given by the coarse grid solution. Error bounds of the approximate solution are derived. Numerical results on examples of known analytical solutions, lid-driven cavity flow and backward-facing step flow are also given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the method.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 430-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xueying Zhang ◽  
Xin An ◽  
C. S. Chen

AbstractThe local RBFs based collocation methods (LRBFCM) is presented to solve two-dimensional incompressible Navier-Stokes equations. In avoiding the ill-conditioned problem, the weight coefficients of linear combination with respect to the function values and its derivatives can be obtained by solving low-order linear systems within local supporting domain. Then, we reformulate local matrix in the global and sparse matrix. The obtained large sparse linear systems can be directly solved instead of using more complicated iterative method. The numerical experiments have shown that the developed LRBFCM is suitable for solving the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations with high accuracy and efficiency.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aiwen Wang ◽  
Xin Zhao ◽  
Peihua Qin ◽  
Dongxiu Xie

We investigate an Oseen two-level stabilized finite-element method based on the local pressure projection for the 2D/3D steady Navier-Stokes equations by the lowest order conforming finite-element pairs (i.e.,Q1−P0andP1−P0). Firstly, in contrast to other stabilized methods, they are parameter free, no calculation of higher-order derivatives and edge-based data structures, implemented at the element level with minimal cost. In addition, the Oseen two-level stabilized method involves solving one small nonlinear Navier-Stokes problem on the coarse mesh with mesh sizeH, a large general Stokes equation on the fine mesh with mesh sizeh=O(H)2. The Oseen two-level stabilized finite-element method provides an approximate solution (uh,ph) with the convergence rate of the same order as the usual stabilized finite-element solutions, which involves solving a large Navier-Stokes problem on a fine mesh with mesh sizeh. Therefore, the method presented in this paper can save a large amount of computational time. Finally, numerical tests confirm the theoretical results. Conclusion can be drawn that the Oseen two-level stabilized finite-element method is simple and efficient for solving the 2D/3D steady Navier-Stokes equations.


Author(s):  
Yasi Zheng ◽  
Wenjun Liu ◽  
Yadong Liu

We address the dynamics of two-dimensional Navier-Stokes models with infinite delay and hereditary memory, whose kernels are a much larger class of functions than the one considered in the literature, on a bounded domain. We prove the existence and uniqueness of weak solutions by means of Faedo-Galerkin method. Moreover, we establish the existence of global attractor for the system with the existence of a bounded absorbing set and asymptotic compact property.


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