Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
757011 Computers & Fluids 2006 35 Pages PDF
Abstract

Benchmark results are reported of two separate sets of numerical experiments on the collision of a dipole with a no-slip boundary at several Reynolds numbers. One set of numerical simulations is performed with a finite differences code while the other set concerns simulations conducted with a Chebyshev pseudospectral code. Well-defined initial and boundary conditions are used and the accuracy and convergence of the numerical solutions have been investigated by inspection of several global quantities like the total kinetic energy, the enstrophy and the total angular momentum of the flow, and the vorticity distribution and vorticity flux at the no-slip boundaries. It is found that the collision of the dipole with the no-slip wall and the subsequent flow evolution is dramatically influenced by small-scale vorticity produced during and after the collision process. The trajectories of several coherent vortices are tracked during the simulation and show that in particular underresolved high-amplitude vorticity patches near the no-slip walls are potentially responsible for deteriorating accuracy of the computations in the course of time. Our numerical simulations clearly indicate that it is extremely difficult to obtain mode- or grid-convergence for this seemingly rather simple two-dimensional vortex–wall interaction problem.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Computational Mechanics
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