کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
521442 | 867768 | 2013 | 16 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Interfacial mass transfer of low-diffusive substances in an unsteady flow environment is marked by a very thin boundary layer at the interface and other regions with steep concentration gradients. A numerical scheme capable of resolving accurately most details of this process is presented. In this scheme, the fifth-order accurate WENO method developed by [13] was implemented on a non-uniform staggered mesh to discretize the scalar convection while for the scalar diffusion a fourth-order accurate central discretization was employed. The discretization of the scalar convection–diffusion equation was combined with a fourth-order Navier–Stokes solver which solves the incompressible flow. A dual meshing strategy was employed, in which the scalar was solved on a finer mesh than the incompressible flow. The order of accuracy of the solver for one-dimensional scalar transport was tested on both stretched and uniform grids. Compared to the fifth-order WENO implementation of [10], the [13] method was found to be superior on very coarse meshes. The solver was further tested by performing a number of two-dimensional simulations. At first a grid refinement test was performed at zero viscosity with shear acting on an initially axisymmetric scalar distribution. A second refinement test was conducted for an unstably stratified flow with low diffusivity scalar transport. The unstable stratification led to buoyant convection which was modelled using a Boussinesq approximation with a linear relationship between flow temperature and density. The results show that for the method presented a relatively coarse mesh is sufficient to accurately describe the fluid flow, while the use of a refined dual mesh for the low-diffusive scalars is found to be beneficial in order to obtain a highly accurate resolution with negligible numerical diffusion.
Journal: Journal of Computational Physics - Volume 240, 1 May 2013, Pages 158–173