JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS | 卷:384 |
Constraint-consistent Runge-Kutta methods for one-dimensional incompressible multiphase flow | |
Article | |
Sanderse, B.1  Veldman, A. E. P.2  | |
[1] CWI, Amsterdam, Netherlands | |
[2] Univ Groningen, Bernoulli Inst Math Comp Sci & Artificial Intelli, Groningen, Netherlands | |
关键词: Two-fluid model; Volume constraint; Multiphase flow; Runge-Kutta; Index-3 DAE; Boundary conditions; | |
DOI : 10.1016/j.jcp.2019.02.001 | |
来源: Elsevier | |
【 摘 要 】
New time integration methods are proposed for simulating incompressible multiphase flow in pipelines described by the one-dimensional two-fluid model. The methodology is based on 'half-explicit' Runge-Kutta methods, being explicit for the mass and momentum equations and implicit for the volume constraint. These half-explicit methods are constraint-consistent, i.e., they satisfy the hidden constraints of the two-fluid model, namely the volumetric flow (incompressibility) constraint and the Poisson equation for the pressure. A novel analysis shows that these hidden constraints are present in the continuous, semidiscrete, and fully discrete equations. Next to constraint-consistency, the new methods are conservative: the original mass and momentum equations are solved, and the proper shock conditions are satisfied; efficient: the implicit constraint is rewritten into a pressure Poisson equation, and the time step for the explicit part is restricted by a CFL condition based on the convective wave speeds; and accurate: achieving high order temporal accuracy for all solution components (masses, velocities, and pressure). High-order accuracy is obtained by constructing a new third-order Runge-Kutta method that satisfies the additional order conditions arising from the presence of the constraint in combination with time-dependent boundary conditions. Two test cases (Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities in a pipeline and liquid sloshing in a cylindrical tank) show that for time-independent boundary conditions the half-explicit formulation with a classic fourth-order Runge-Kutta method accurately integrates the two-fluid model equations in time while preserving all constraints. A third test case (ramp-up of gas production in a multiphase pipeline) shows that our new third-order method is preferred for cases featuring time-dependent boundary conditions. (C) 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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