Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4525780 Advances in Water Resources 2013 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Simulation of geothermal systems is challenging due to coupled physical processes in highly heterogeneous media. Combining the exponential Rosenbrock–Euler method and Rosenbrock-type methods with control-volume (two-point flux approximation) space discretizations leads to efficient numerical techniques for simulating geothermal systems. In terms of efficiency and accuracy, the exponential Rosenbrock–Euler time integrator has advantages over standard time-discretization schemes, which suffer from time-step restrictions or excessive numerical diffusion when advection processes are dominating. Based on linearization of the equation at each time step, we make use of matrix exponentials of the Jacobian from the spatial discretization, which provide the exact solution in time for the linearized equations. This is at the expense of computing the matrix exponentials of the stiff Jacobian matrix, together with propagating a linearized system. However, using a Krylov subspace or Léja points techniques make these computations efficient.The Rosenbrock-type methods use the appropriate rational functions of the Jacobian of the ODEs resulting from the spatial discretization. The parameters in these schemes are found in consistency with the required order of convergence in time. As a result, these schemes are A-stable and only a few linear systems are solved at each time step. The efficiency of the methods compared to standard time-discretization techniques are demonstrated in numerical examples.

Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Geothermal systems is challenging in highly heterogeneous porous media. ► Standard schemes suffer time-step restrictions or excessive numerical diffusion. ► Exponential Rosenbrock–Euler method and Rosenbrock-type methods lead to efficient tools. ► No need to solve nonlinear algebraic equations as with standard implicit methods.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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