Title of article :
Analysis of central and upwind compact schemes
Author/Authors :
Sengupta، نويسنده , , T.K. and Ganeriwal، نويسنده , , G. and De، نويسنده , , S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
18
From page :
677
To page :
694
Abstract :
Central and upwind compact schemes for spatial discretization have been analyzed with respect to accuracy in spectral space, numerical stability and dispersion relation preservation. A von Neumann matrix spectral analysis is developed here to analyze spatial discretization schemes for any explicit and implicit schemes to investigate the full domain simultaneously. This allows one to evaluate various boundary closures and their effects on the domain interior. The same method can be used for stability analysis performed for the semi-discrete initial boundary value problems (IBVP). This analysis tells one about the stability for every resolved length scale. Some well-known compact schemes that were found to be G-K-S and time stable are shown here to be unstable for selective length scales by this analysis. This is attributed to boundary closure and we suggest special boundary treatment to remove this shortcoming. To demonstrate the asymptotic stability of the resultant schemes, numerical solution of the wave equation is compared with analytical solution. Furthermore, some of these schemes are used to solve two-dimensional Navier–Stokes equation and a computational acoustic problem to check their ability to solve problems for long time. It is found that those schemes, that were found unstable for the wave equation, are unsuitable for solving incompressible Navier–Stokes equation. In contrast, the proposed compact schemes with improved boundary closure and an explicit higher-order upwind scheme produced correct results. The numerical solution for the acoustic problem is compared with the exact solution and the quality of the match shows that the used compact scheme has the requisite DRP property.
Keywords :
stability and convergence of numerical methods , Wave propagation , finite difference methods , Error analysis
Journal title :
Journal of Computational Physics
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Journal of Computational Physics
Record number :
1477718
Link To Document :
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