TY - JOUR
T1 - On Numerical Integration and Conservation of Cell-Centered Finite Difference Method
AU - Wang, Zihao
AU - Liao, Fei
AU - Ye, Zhengyin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - Conservation and numerical integration have been important issues for finite difference method related to robustness, reliability and accuracy requirements. In this paper, we discuss the relationship between the discretized Newton–Leibniz formula and four conservation and integration properties, including geometric conservation, flow conservation, surface integration and volume integration, for the multi-block based high-order cell-centered finite difference method. In order to achieve these conservation and integration properties, as well as multi-block compatibility, high-order accuracy, and stability within a unified methodology, we propose a new series of boundary schemes that incorporate all these constraints. To ensure geometric conservation, conservative metrics and Jacobian are adopted for coodinate transformation. To realize flow conservation, the width of the boundary stencil is enlarged to provide more degrees of freedom in order to meet the conservation constraints. To achieve uniformly high-order accuracy with arbitrary multi-block topology, cross-interface interpolation or differencing is avoided by utilizing one-sided scheme. To maintain stability, boundary interpolation scheme is designed as upwindly and compactly as possible. The proposed method is finally tested through a series of numerical cases, including a wave propagation and an isentropic vortex for accuracy verification, several acoustic tests to demonstrate the capability of handling arbitrary multi-block grid topology, a wavy channel and a closed flying wing problem for conservation verification. These numerical tests indicate that the new scheme possesses satisfactory conservation and integration properties while satisfying the requirements for high-order accuracy and stability.
AB - Conservation and numerical integration have been important issues for finite difference method related to robustness, reliability and accuracy requirements. In this paper, we discuss the relationship between the discretized Newton–Leibniz formula and four conservation and integration properties, including geometric conservation, flow conservation, surface integration and volume integration, for the multi-block based high-order cell-centered finite difference method. In order to achieve these conservation and integration properties, as well as multi-block compatibility, high-order accuracy, and stability within a unified methodology, we propose a new series of boundary schemes that incorporate all these constraints. To ensure geometric conservation, conservative metrics and Jacobian are adopted for coodinate transformation. To realize flow conservation, the width of the boundary stencil is enlarged to provide more degrees of freedom in order to meet the conservation constraints. To achieve uniformly high-order accuracy with arbitrary multi-block topology, cross-interface interpolation or differencing is avoided by utilizing one-sided scheme. To maintain stability, boundary interpolation scheme is designed as upwindly and compactly as possible. The proposed method is finally tested through a series of numerical cases, including a wave propagation and an isentropic vortex for accuracy verification, several acoustic tests to demonstrate the capability of handling arbitrary multi-block grid topology, a wavy channel and a closed flying wing problem for conservation verification. These numerical tests indicate that the new scheme possesses satisfactory conservation and integration properties while satisfying the requirements for high-order accuracy and stability.
KW - Conservative finite difference method
KW - Discretized Newton–Leibniz formula
KW - Flow conservation
KW - Geometric conservation
KW - Numerical integration
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85199436270&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10915-024-02630-1
DO - 10.1007/s10915-024-02630-1
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85199436270
SN - 0885-7474
VL - 100
JO - Journal of Scientific Computing
JF - Journal of Scientific Computing
IS - 3
M1 - 73
ER -