Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5763775 | Advances in Water Resources | 2017 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
Richards's equation describes steady-state or transient flow in a variably saturated medium. For a medium having multiple layers of soils that are not aligned with coordinate axes, a mesh fitted to these layers is no longer orthogonal and the classical two-point flux approximation finite volume scheme is no longer accurate. We propose new second-order accurate nonlinear finite volume (NFV) schemes for the head and pressure formulations of Richards' equation. We prove that the discrete maximum principles hold for both formulations at steady-state which mimics similar properties of the continuum solution. The second-order accuracy is achieved using high-order upwind algorithms for the relative permeability. Numerical simulations of water infiltration into a dry soil show significant advantage of the second-order NFV schemes over the first-order NFV schemes even on coarse meshes. Since explicit calculation of the Jacobian matrix becomes prohibitively expensive for high-order schemes due to build-in reconstruction and slope limiting algorithms, we study numerically the preconditioning strategy introduced recently in Lipnikov et al. (2016) that uses a stable approximation of the continuum Jacobian. Numerical simulations show that the new preconditioner reduces computational cost up to 2-3 times in comparison with the conventional preconditioners.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
D. Svyatskiy, K. Lipnikov,