• Title of article

    Link-wise artificial compressibility method

  • Author/Authors

    Asinari، نويسنده , , Pietro and Ohwada، نويسنده , , Taku and Chiavazzo، نويسنده , , Eliodoro and Di Rienzo، نويسنده , , Antonio F.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    35
  • From page
    5109
  • To page
    5143
  • Abstract
    The artificial compressibility method (ACM) for the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations is (link-wise) reformulated (referred to as LW-ACM) by a finite set of discrete directions (links) on a regular Cartesian mesh, in analogy with the lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). The main advantage is the possibility of exploiting well established technologies originally developed for LBM and classical computational fluid dynamics, with special emphasis on finite differences (at least in the present paper), at the cost of minor changes. For instance, wall boundaries not aligned with the background Cartesian mesh can be taken into account by tracing the intersections of each link with the wall (analogously to LBM technology). LW-ACM requires no high-order moments beyond hydrodynamics (often referred to as ghost moments) and no kinetic expansion. Like finite difference schemes, only standard Taylor expansion is needed for analyzing consistency. Preliminary efforts towards optimal implementations have shown that LW-ACM is capable of similar computational speed as optimized (BGK-) LBM. In addition, the memory demand is significantly smaller than (BGK-) LBM. Importantly, with an efficient implementation, this algorithm may be among the few which are compute-bound and not memory-bound. Two- and three-dimensional benchmarks are investigated, and an extensive comparative study between the present approach and state of the art methods from the literature is carried out. Numerical evidences suggest that LW-ACM represents an excellent alternative in terms of simplicity, stability and accuracy.
  • Keywords
    lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) , Artificial compressibility method (ACM) , Complex boundaries , Incompressible Navier–Stokes equations
  • Journal title
    Journal of Computational Physics
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Journal of Computational Physics
  • Record number

    1484440