Out 3
Out 3
Out 3
A Dissertation Presented
by
Hyunkyung Lim
to
The Graduate School in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the
Degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
in
August 2009
UMI 3401712
Copyright 2010 by ProQuest LLC.
All rights reserved. This edition of the work is protected against
unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code.
ProQuest LLC
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P.O. Box 1346
Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346
We, the dissertation committee for the above candidate for the Doctor of
Philosophy degree, hereby recommend acceptance of this dissertation.
James Glimm
Advisor
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics
Xiaolin Li
Chairman
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics
Xiangmin Jiao
Member
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics
Foluso Ladeinde
Outside Member
Department of Mechanical Engineering
ii
We are concerned with the chaotic flow fields of turbulent mixing. Chaotic
flow is found in an extreme form in multiply shocked Richtmyer-Meshkov unstable flows. The goal of a converged simulation for this problem is twofold:
to obtain converged solutions for macro solution features, such as the trajectories of the principal shock waves, mixing zone edges, and mean densities and
velocities within each phase, and also for such micro solution features as the
joint probability distributions of the temperature and species concentration or
a chemical reaction rate. We introduce parameterized subgrid models of mass
and thermal diffusion, to define the large eddy simulation (LES) that replicate
the micro features observed in the direct numerical simulation (DNS). The
Schmidt numbers and Prandtl numbers are chosen to represent typical liquid,
iii
gas and plasma parameter values. Our main result is to explore the variation
of the Schmidt, Prandtl and Reynolds numbers by three orders of magnitude,
and the mesh by a factor of 8 per linear dimension (up to 3200 cells per dimension), to allow exploration of both DNS and LES regimes and verification
of the simulations for both macro and micro observables. We study mesh convergence for key properties describing the molecular level of mixing, including
chemical reaction rates between the distinct fluid species.
Methodologically, the results are also new. In common with the shock
capturing community, we allow and maintain sharp solution gradients, and
we enhance these gradients through use of front tracking. In common with
the turbulence modeling community, we include subgrid scale models with
no adjustable parameters for LES. These two methodologies have not been
previously combined. In contrast to both of these methodologies, our use of
Front Tracking, with DNS or LES resolution of the momentum equation at or
near the Kolmogorov scale, but without resolving the Batchelor scale, allows
a feasible approach to the modeling of high Schmidt number flows.
Key Words: Turbulence, Subgrid models, Large eddy simulation, Direct
numerical simulation, Mass diffusion, Thermal diffusion, Schmidt numbers,
Prandtl numbers
iv
To my parents
Table of Contents
List of Figures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
xii
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.1
1.2
1.2.1
1.2.2
Dissertation Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11
. . . . . . .
12
2.1
12
2.2
16
1 Introduction
1.3
2.2.1
2.2.2
18
2.2.3
25
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
27
3.1
28
3.2
Research Objectives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
32
. . . . . . . . . .
40
42
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
46
5.1
Joint PDFs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
46
5.2
Concentration Moments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
49
5.3
Temperature PDF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
52
5.4
Chemical Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
55
5.5
56
. . . . .
58
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
60
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
62
vii
List of Figures
1.1
3.1
Initial (left) and late time (right) density plot for the RichtmyerMeshkov fluid instability (unregularized, with zero physical transport coefficients) under study in this paper. . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2
29
3.3
31
Plot of the interface length divided by the mixing zone area vs.
time. Left: Length and volume measured in physical units. Right:
Length and volume measured in mesh units ([physical length /
physical area] x). Results for four mesh levels are displayed.
viii
32
3.4
Chemical reaction rate at t = 90 for three representative values for the transport parameters, and each for three values of
the Reynolds number. The activation temperature is chosen as
15, 000oK. The point of this plot is the strikingly different values
obtained for hwi for the nine physical regimes considered here.
4.1
39
Time integrated relative discrepancy in the mixing zone edge locations as compared to a fine grid, zero transport simulation.
The discrepancy, for cases l and g, is mainly due to mesh errors
and is partly due to modification of physical parameters. The
discrepancy decreases with mesh refinement, uniformly as physical parameters are varied. The plasma case p shows convergence,
but to a Reynolds number dependent limit distinct (for small Re)
from the zero transport case.
4.2
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
41
4.3
42
5.1
44
Case l. The joint pdf of light species concentration and temperature at time t = 90. The data has been collected into 10 10
bins. The mesh is 1600 3200 and Re 6000.
ix
. . . . . . . . .
47
5.2
Case g. The joint pdf of light species concentration and temperature at time t = 90. The data has been collected into 10 10
bins. The mesh is 1600 3200 and Re 6000.
5.3
. . . . . . . . .
48
Case p. The joint pdf of light species concentration and temperature at time t = 90. The data has been collected into 10 10
bins. The mesh is 1600 3200 and Re 3000.
5.4
. . . . . . . . .
48
5.5
5.6
. . .
53
54
57
List of Tables
3.1
4.1
34
5.1
43
Mesh errors for the joint temperature-concentration pdfs to illustrate possibilities of mesh convergence. Comparison is coarse (c)
to fine (f) and medium (m) to fine with pdfs compared using the
Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric. Various physical cases reported. .
5.2
49
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
51
5.3
Mesh errors for the specific chemical production w for an activation temperature TAC = 8, 000oK. The comparison, based on
the Kolmogorov-Smirnov matric, shows mesh convergence. The
comparison is coarse mesh (c) to fine (f) and medium (m) to fine.
Various physical cases reported.
5.4
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
52
Errors for the temperature pdfs measured in the KolmogorovSmirnov metric show mesh convergence. Comparison is coarse
mesh (c) to fine (f) and medium (m) to fine. Various physical
cases reported.
5.5
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
55
Relative coarse grid ensemble fluctuations (2) divided by ensemble mean, and mesh errors for the specific chemical production
w for an activation temperature TAC = 15, 000oK. Comparison
based on the Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric. Comparison is coarse
mesh (c) to fine (f) and medium (m) to fine. Only cases l and g
are reported.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
xii
56
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1
Introduction
1.1
scales generally too broad to be modeled effectively by explicit numerical algorithms. The dimensionless Reynolds number governs this process. Turbulent mixing couples turbulence to a concentration equation and introduces
the Schmidt number and the Prandtl number as dimensionless parameters.
We consider flows which are compressible and which couple the concentration
equation actively into the flow dynamics (due to a density contrast, measured
by the dimensionless Atwood number A = (2 1 )/(2 + 1 ), with A > 0).
These two properties introduce features into the modeling not present in theories of passive scalar transport by a turbulent field [2, 43]. Acceleration driven
turbulent mixing is a classical hydrodynamical instability, in which acceleration is directed across a fluid interface separating distinct fluids of different
densities [53]. Steady acceleration of a density discontinuity defines the classical Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability and impulsive acceleration produced by a
1
shock wave passing through the fluids defines the Richtmyer-Meshkov mixing.
We are concerned with the Richtmyer-Meshkov (RM) instability.
Numerical modeling of turbulence requires removal of degrees of freedom, so that the ones that remain can fit into a feasible computation. There
are three numerical models in the computation such as Reynolds averaged
Navier-Stokes simulations (RANS), large eddy simulations (LES) and direct
numerical simulations (DNS). Removal of fluctuations, to study statistically
mean quantities leads to RANS equations. Removal of small length scales, to
study the large scale flow features leads to LES, while the restriction to small
scale problems allows DNS, in which all transport effects are fully resolved.
These terms have analogous meanings in the case of turbulent mixing. Both
RANS and LES call for closure models, to introduce the influence of the omitted scales upon those computed. LES are formulated in terms of an averaging
procedure. When this average is replaced by the mesh block average over the
computational grid, the LES method is called implicit (ILES). The closure
models generally contain parameters which are set by comparison to a more
exact computation. In this sense LES and DNS (and physical experiments to
the extent available) are used to validate the parameters in RANS models and
DNS is used to validate those in an LES model.
Since we recognize at the outset that it is not possible to represent all
details of a turbulent mixing flow in a feasible computation, we list here the
types of observables we would hope to compute correctly. The most important
macroscopic variables are those which define the mixing zone, that is the edge
position for the mixing zone as a function of time, and the time dependent
2
locations of the principal shock waves (if any) which play a role in defining
it. Additional macroscopic variables which serve to define the flow include
the dominant size of the bubbles (light fluid inclusions in the heavy fluid)
and mean fluctuations of the mixing zone edge. From the point of view of
turbulent combustion, the microscopic (atomic) properties of the mixture are
important, to specify the stochiometry needed for combustion. According to
[47], the joint probability distribution of the species concentrations and of the
temperature is a required input for LES combustion models.
1.2
method tracks a discontinuity interface by using analytical solutions of Riemann problems across the interface, and it applies a finite difference scheme
to solve the equation on different sides of the discontinuity interface by using
the ghost cell extrapolation method [21, 26]. This ghost cell method was also
used in tracking using the level set method [12, 13]. The ghost cell method
does not preserve conservation at the cells cut by the interface and it has less
than first order accuracy at discontinuities. The algorithm is conservative for
interior regular cells, but it is not conservative at the irregular cells near the
interface. A fully conservative front tracking algorithm has been implemented
in FronTier. The algorithm is based on the previous works [2225, 36, 37] with
dimensional generalization and algorithmic refinement. Also there are some
pioneer works on the conservative tracking algorithms by Chern and Colella
[5], Pember, Bell and Colella [44], Swartz and Wendroff [54], and the early one
by Harten and Hyman [29]. In this algorithm the front is tracked as a space
time surface (three dimensions in the four dimensional space time, for the case
of three spatial dimensions). The space time cells cut by this surface are differenced using a finite volume approach. We will give a brief review of the
front tracking and fully conservative front tracking algorithm in the FronTier
code.
1.2.1
the interface inside the box. Finally, we relink the interface segment inside
the box with the ambient grid free interface. The LGB method combines the
robustness of the grid based method with the accuracy of grid free method. It
is thus a significant improvement to both of these algorithms.
As the next step, we update all the interior states on cell centers. A
connected region in the domain separated by the interface is represented by a
component. Therefore, each grid node is associated with a specific component
in addition to the state variables. The interior states are updated by finite
difference schemes.
1.2.2
(1.1)
where U Rp and fj (U) = (f1j (U), ..., fpj (U))T Rp are defined in a spatial
domain RN .
Integrating (1.1) in a time-space domain V RN +1 , we obtain the integral form of (1.1),
U
+ F (U))dV = 0 .
t
(1.2)
(1.3)
The finite difference method presented here is an explicit finite volume integration scheme based on the integral form (1.3).
Assume a space-time discretization {Vi } which conforms to the spacetime interface as U evolves in one time step from tn to tn+1 . We solve (1.3)
explicitly in this region. We define each Vi as a space-time control volume, and
Vi = Din Din+1 Si with Din , Din+1 , and Si meet at most at their boundaries,
where Din and Din+1 are the boundary surfaces of Vi at time level n and n + 1
respectively, and Si is the complementary boundary surface of Vi . Dividing
the calculation of the integral (1.3) into three parts over Din , Din+1 and Si
respectively, we have
|Din+1|U |tn+1 =
where
1
U |tn = n
|Di |
and
U |tn+1 =
1
|Din+1 |
|Din |U |tn
Si
(1.4)
|Din |
|Din+1 |
are cell averages, |Din | is the face area of Din , |Din+1 | is the face area of Din+1 ,
and n is the outward normal of Si . Therefore, U |tn+1 , is the solution to (1.4)
at time tn+1 .
To calculate U |tn+1 , we first need to determine the space-time control
volume {Vi }. Then we calculate the fluxes defined on the surfaces of Vi , so
that we can apply (1.4).
8
U |tn+1 = U |tn
Si
F (U) ndS ,
(1.5)
when the control volume has a constant face shape Din+1 = Din . In such a
case, the complementary boundary surface Si is parallel to the time axis.
The discontinuities of the numerical solution u form an INTERFACE
(set of POINTs for a 1D ambient dimensional space, CURVEs for 2D, and
SURFACEs for 3D), which is propagated from one time level to the next.
These interface constituents are described in a piecewise linear manner, and
made up of linear elements (simplexes), which are defined by their vertices, the
interface POINTs. The front POINTs are propagated by solving the Riemann
Problem in the normal direction and a tangential sweep to update the states
on the interface. Here and below, we use the dimension D of an interface
to refer to the ambient space in which it is embedded. Thus D may be the
dimension of space or of space time, and the elements of the D dimensional
interface have intrinsic dimension D - 1 (co-dimension 1) or lower. See [1820]
for details.
The conservative front tracking algorithm contains the following major
steps:
1. To propagate the spatial interface at time level n to a new interface at time
level n + 1. The grid-free interface, or its LGB reconstruction in the
case of spatial tangles, is the permanent interface used within the time
step propagation loop, while the space-time GB interface is only used for
9
interface intersect. These fragments together with the regular space time grid
cells which do not meet the interface are the space-time control volumes. We
apply the finite volume scheme to them to calculate the numerical solutions.
The LGB (GF when there is no topological bifurcation) propagated interface poses a difficult problem to the construction of irregular control volume.
Therefore, to simplify the procedure of constructing space-time control volume {Vi } in (1.4), we clip the GF space-time interface into a GB space-time
interface. As a result, the space-time control volumes are grid based and their
vertices are intersections of the space-time interface and regular space-time
cell edges.
1.3
Dissertation Organization
Chapter 1 first gives the overview and brief review of the front tracking
atomic level mixing have a similar dependence. We also observe that macroscopic variables are insensitive to variation of physical and numerical modeling
while the microscopic variables are highly sensitive.
Chapter 6 discusses the mathematical existence and uniqueness theories
and the conclusion is discussed in Chapter 7.
12
Chapter 2
The governing equation and the numerical development for LES are presented in this chapter.
2.1
diffusion and thermal conductivity, for two miscible species initially separated
by a sharp interface. The primitive equations describe the DNS limit, in
which transport effects are resolved. A measure of this limit, as applied to the
momentum equation, is the criteria Kmesh 1 where Kmesh = K /x and
K is the Kolmogorov length scale,
K = (k3 /)1/4 ,
(2.1)
= k |S|2 ,
(2.2)
where
13
vi
vj
+
xj
xi
(2.3)
2A2ij .
(2.4)
summed.
vei
=0,
+
t
xi
dij ij
vej (vei vej + pij )
=
,
+
t
xi
xi
xi
E (E + p)vei
dij vej
=
+
+
t
xi
xi
xi
(H)
(T )
(V )
Te
xi
(2.5)
xi
fh H
fl )D
e
(H
1 kk vei qi
q
q
+
i i
,
2 xi
xi
xi
xi
!
()
e
e evei
e
+
D
i ,
=
t
xi
xi
xi
xi
e
xi
(2.6)
!
(2.7)
(2.8)
(2.9)
(H)
(T )
(V )
, qi , qi
()
and qi .
ij = (g
vi vj vei vej )
(H)
qi
(T )
qi
(V )
qi
()
qi
e ei )
= (c]
p T vi cep T v
1
= (v^
ei )
k vk vi vek vek v
2
fi evei ) .
= (v
(2.10)
(2.11)
(2.12)
(2.13)
(2.14)
the total mass density, the species mass fraction, the velocity, the pressure,
15
(2.15)
fh and H
fl are the partial specific enthalpy of each species defined by
Here H
fh = eeh + p
H
(2.16)
fl = eel + p ,
H
(2.17)
where eeh and eel are the specific internal energy of each species. The equation
of state for each of the species is taken to be a stiffened gamma law gas.
For simplicity, we assume that the mixture of the two fluids, at the level
of a single grid block not meeting an interface, or for a cut grid block on one
side of an interface, is mixed at a molecular level. Thus we do not consider
turbulent modeling corrections to the grid level equation of state. The equation
of state for a mixture of stiffened polytropic gases is not a stiffened polytropic
gas, when the stiffening parameters p of the two species are unequal. As is
conventional, we impose pressure and temperature equilibrium for the grid cell
or cut cell mixture. The thermodynamic functions are then given as solutions
of an algebraic equation, and for the case to two fluids, as is considered here,
the algebraic equation is quadratic, and solvable in closed form.
The viscous stress tensor dij is expressed as
dij = d
vei
vej
+
xj
xi
16
2 vek
ij
3 xk
(2.18)
(2.19)
1
= cv T vi + e vi + p vi + ( 1)cv T vi p vi + vk vk vi
2
(2.20)
1
e vei + (e
1)cev Tevei + p vei p vei ) + vek vek vei
= (cev Tevei + f
2
(2.21)
1
^
+ (c
ecev Tevei ) + (]
e vi ef
ei ) + (v^
ei ))
v T vi
v
k vk vi vek vek v
2
(2.22)
(H)
= (E + p)vei + (qi
1
(T )
+ qi ) kk vei + (]
e vi ef
ei ) .
v
2
(2.23)
2.2
with separate solution steps for the hyperbolic and pure diffusion parts of
the equations. The hyperbolic solutions are obtained by the front tracking
FronTier algorithm [10]. The interface hyperbolic updates are split into normal
and tangential operators defined at front points. The normal update uses
a predictor-corrector algorithm, with the predictor step a Riemann solution
17
using the left and right front states as input. The corrector step, based on finite
differences in characteristic coordinates, couples the normal direction front
propagation to signals coming from interior states. The interior hyperbolic
update uses a Godunov finite difference solver based on the MUSCL algorithm
[7, 57]. A sharp (tracked) interface in the hyperbolic update uses ghost cells
[27] in the interior state update to eliminate [38] transport related numerical
mass and thermal diffusion across the interface.
Physical transport for front states is introduced via finite differences in a
normal-tangential rectangular coordinate system at the front. Discretization
is outlined in Section 2.2.1, where the turbulent transport term is defined.
The parabolic update of the interior states, i.e. the inclusion of molecular
and turbulent transport terms for species diffusion, viscosity and thermal heat
conductivity, is via conventional finite differences. Irregular stencils for the
interior states, i.e. the stencils crossing the front, are treated conventionally,
without regard to the front or any ghost cell values. An explicit solver for
both the interior and the front state parabolic solvers, with possible time step
subcycling, is sufficient to allow a stable computation for most of the mesh
and transport parameter range considered.
For the highly heat diffusive plasma conditions, an implicit solver is used.
With transport terms strong enough to require an implicit solver, there is no
need for, or benefit from, tracking. Moreover, the formulation of the tracked
front states together with the interior states appears to be inconsistent with
common implicit solver algorithms. We allow selective untracking of specific
(primitive) variables within an overall tracked solution. In this algorithm, after
18
the interior and front state updates, the untracked front states (the primitive
variables that are not being tracked, for example energy, in the case p) are redetermined by one sided interpolation from neighboring interior states of the
same component. Here one sided means that the interpolating interior states
are restricted to have the same component as that of the front state in question.
In the unusual case of no nearby interior states with the required component, a
two sided interpolation is used, in which the component restriction is dropped.
As a test of this algorithm, we compared it to two sided interpolation, and
we compared it to an explicit algorithm (with tracking of the primitive energy
variable). For this case, extensive subcycling in the parabolic step for the
energy equation was needed for numerical stability. There was no notable
difference among these three algorithms. The FronTier numerical Schmidt
and Prandtl numbers are , and the code allows efficient simulation of any
desired (physical) Schmidt or Prandtl number.
We develop the subgrid scale dynamic model terms used in this thesis,
following and slightly extending ideas of [40, 42].
2.2.1
We use the trace-free Smagorinsky eddy viscosity model for the sub grid
scale (SGS) stress ij . The ij can be decomposed into an anisotropic (trace
19
zero) tensor (ija ) and an isotropic tensor (iji ), which are modeled separately:
ijM
ij
ij
e Seija + ij 2CI 2 |S|
e2 ,
= ij kk
+ kk
= ija + iji = 2CS 2 |S|
3
3
3
(2.24)
where Seija = Seij 3ij Sekk . and | | is defined by (2.4). The CS and CI are model
(2.25)
use a 2 2 mesh block average to define the test filter. Let a spatially testfiltered quantity be denoted by a caret. The test filtered stress Tij is defined
as:
[
Tij = v
i vj
ci v
cj
v
b
2ij b 2b be 2
be bea
a
i
b 2b
|
S|
S ij +
TM
=
T
+
T
=
2C
CI |S| .
S
ij
ij
ij
3
(2.26)
(2.27)
Using Germanos identity [14], the Leonard stress Lij can be expressed
20
as:
\
c
ci v
cj
vi vj
v
e
vi c
vej
[
Lij = Tij c
=
=
.
e
v
v
e
ij
i j
b
b
(2.28)
The right hand side is completely computable from the resolved variables. We
next introduce the ansatz that CS and CI are independent of the length scale.
In other words, the same CS and CI occur in (2.24) and (2.27). In this case,
where
be bea
\
e Sea 2CS
b 2b
Laij = Taij bija = 2CS 2 |S|
|
S|
S ij = CS Mija ,
ij
be bea
\
e Sea 2
b 2b
Mija = 22 |S|
|
S|
S ij .
ij
(2.29)
(2.30)
We would next solve (2.29) for CS . However, this equation corresponds to five
independent relations for CS and an algebraic solution is not possible.
We introduce an averaging operation h i. The specification of the average is problem dependent, as the universal definition of an ensemble average is
inconvenient to use. For the present problem, we regard this average as taken
over the symmetry variable , i.e., an average over circular arcs (constant radius). To assure numerical regularity, we also apply a convolution average in
the radial direction with a stencil extending 6r from current radius.
Applying this average to (2.29) and using least squares in the resulting
21
(2.31)
Here the expression ( )+ means the positive part of the quantity in the
parenthesis. In other words, we clip negative values. This step is consistent
with methods proposed elsewhere [40]. The same method is used for the
coefficients of turbulent heat conduction and species concentration diffusion.
The turbulent viscosity determined by (2.31) and the related turbulent
transport coefficients determined below were monitored for the simulations of
the present study. The results were generally consistent with theoretical expectations. For example, the turbulent viscosity was respectively small (comparable, dominant) in relation to the molecular value of viscosity for the three
cases of DNS, LES near to DNS, and LES far from DNS.
To determine CI , we consider
be 2
[
i
i
e 2 + 2CI
b 2b
Likk = Tikk bkk
= 2CI 2 |S|
|S|
= CI Mkk
,
(2.32)
where a summation convention was used for the kk repeated indices and
be 2
[
i
e 2 + 2
b 2b
Mkk
= 22 |S|
|S|
(2.33)
(2.34)
c+1/2 (f+ f0l )c1/2 (f0l f ) = c+1/2 f+ (c+1/2 +c1/2 )f0l +c1/2 f . (2.35)
Here f0l and f0r are front states on the left and right side of the front, while
f and c1/2 are evaluated along the normal to the front at distances x or
1/2 x from the front.
The normal direction discretization for the right front state is similar,
and the tangential direction discretizations differ only in that all values are
associated with either the left or the right side of the front.
The discretization of the mixed partials is complicated by the use of a 5
point stencil and a fixed order of differentiation. We write
N cT f = T cN f + (N c)(T f ) (T c)(N f ) .
(2.36)
(2.36) allows all mixed partial derivatives to be evaluated in the order of the
sweeps, first normal derivatives and then tangential derivatives. During the
normal sweep, we evaluate and store front values for N c and N f , which can
be differenced using obvious formulas during the tangential sweep to yield a
discrete expression for the LHS of (2.36).
2.2.2
We only consider the eddy diffusivity SGS model for the SGS heat trans(H)
port flux qi
(V )
= 0 = qi . The SGS
qi
= cep
= cep
e Te
CS 2 |S|
P rt xi
kt Te
,
P rt xi
(2.37)
(2.38)
(H)
Qi
c v
ci
cp T
c
\
= c
,
p T vi
2
b
24
(2.39)
Qi
= b
cb
ep
be be
b 2 |S|
CS
T
.
P rt xi
(2.40)
(H)
Li
(H)
Qi
d
(H)
qi =
cc
c v
cp T
ci
c\
c
c
cep Tee
vi
p T vi
\
e
= cep T vei
.
2
2
2
b
b
(2.41)
To determine P rt ,
(H)
Li
(H)M
= Qi
CS 2
\
(H)M
qi
=
P rt
\e!
be
CS (H)
be T
b 2b
e T
cep |S|
cb
ep |S|
=
M
,
xi
xi
P rt i
(2.42)
where
(H)
Mi
= 2
\e!
b
T
Te
2b b b
e
b
e
cep |S|
cep |S|
.
xi
xi
(2.43)
(H)
(H)
Mi Mi )+ i
P rt = CS P (H)
.
(H)
h( Li Mi )+ i
h(
Discretization is as in (2.35).
25
(2.44)
2.2.3
qi
e e
CS 2 |S|
kt e
=
,
Sct xi
Sct xi
(2.45)
At the test filter level, the SGS scalar transport is defined as:
()
Qi
c
ci
v
d
= vi
,
b
be be
b 2 |S|
CS
b
=
.
Sct xi
(2.46)
(2.47)
Li
()
Qi
d
()
qi =
\
c
c
ci
vi
v
vei e
de c
= e
vi
.
b
b
26
(2.48)
To determine Sct ,
()M
Li = Qi
CS 2
[
()M
qi
=
Sct
\e !
be
CS ()
be
e
b 2b
|S|
=
M
,
|S|
xi
xi
Sct i
(2.49)
where
()
Mi
= 2
\e !
b
be e
e
b 2b
|S|
|S|
.
xi
xi
(2.50)
Sct = CS
()
()
Mi Mi )+ i
.
P () ()
h( Li Mi )+ i
h(
27
(2.51)
Chapter 3
3.1
e + e = cv T +
(3.1)
and
p + p = ( 1)cv T.
(3.2)
Here, is the adiabatic exponent and cv is the specific heat at constant volume
and e is the energy of formation and p has the dimensions of a pressure.
Inside the contact is also a stiffened gamma law gas, representing lucite, with
parameters = 1.85, p = 0.03036, e = 2.49 1018 and cv = 1.46 105 .
The time dependent boundary condition from the RAGE code [41] is located
at r = 24. The initial ambient pressure is p = 106 , and the initial pressure
at the boundary is p = 0.02648, giving rise to an inward propagating shock
at t = 0. The heavy fluid density is 7.282 and the light fluid density is 1.182,
giving an Atwood number A = 0.72. Initial and late time simulation density
plots of unregularized simulations (zero transport coefficients) are shown in
Fig. 3.1.
29
Figure 3.1: Initial (left) and late time (right) density plot for the Richtmyer-Meshkov fluid instability (unregularized, with zero physical transport coefficients) under study in this paper.
30
120
100
80
60
0
20
40
Time
10
15
20
Radius
Figure 3.2: Space time (r, t) contours of the primary waves, as detected by the
wave filter algorithm. These are the inward (direct) and outward (reflected)
shock waves and the inner and outer edges of the mixing zone, all detected
within a single rotational averaging window, in this case [45o , 0o ].
32
0.6
200 x 400
400 x 800
800 x 1600
1600 x 3200
15
20
10
20
40
60
time
80
100
200 x 400
400 x 800
800 x 1600
1600 x 3200
0.4
0.2
120
20
40
60
time
80
100
120
Figure 3.3: Plot of the interface length divided by the mixing zone area vs.
time. Left: Length and volume measured in physical units. Right: Length
and volume measured in mesh units ([physical length / physical area] x).
Results for four mesh levels are displayed.
zone. We call this ratio the mesh level surface fraction. Its value is approximately time independent (about 30%), after a transient period following the
second shock passage. We note here and in many later plots, some lost of
mesh level complexity in the finest grid simulations. Further mesh refinement
studies will be needed to determine the evolution of mesh level complexity under continued mesh refinement. In any case, at the grid levels attained here,
the interface is mesh volume filling, cutoff by the mesh, and highly complex
or chaotic in nature.
3.2
Research Objectives
Our goal is accurate numerical solutions using feasible grids. For the
purpose, we verify the use of large eddy simulations (LES). We study mesh
refinement and mesh convergence and dependence on a range of Reynolds
numbers, including some within the regime of direct numerical simulation
33
cp
is the heat conductivity, the density and cp the specific heat at constant
pressure. U and L are characteristic velocity and length scales. Gases typically
have Schmidt and Prandtl numbers of the order of unity, while liquids typically
have Schmidt numbers in the range Sc 4 102 to 104 and Prandtl numbers
in the range P r 10 to 102 [1, 48]. Dense plasma transport coefficients have
been estimated as Sc 0.6 to 1.5 [52] for a range of plasma conditions relevant
to NIF experiments. Plasma Prandtl numbers are dependent on ionization
levels, nuclear charge, and temperature. A representative plasma value P r
104 can be inferred from the viscosity and heat conductivity values quoted by
Drake [9]. The very high level of thermal conductivity reflected in this value
results from the transport of free electrons, and a time scale sufficient for
the thermalization that allows a single temperature description of the plasma.
We make no comments on this time scale. Numerical Schmidt and Prandtl
numbers are generally not documented. If we assume a numerical shock width
of 1.5x and a numerical contact width of 5x for untracked simulations,
numerical transport coefficients in the range of 0.3 would be reasonable. On
this basis, we consider the transport cases l, g, p from Table 3.1. We allow
physical parameters (Re, Sc, P r) to vary by three orders of magnitude, and
34
Schmidt
103
1
0.3
1
Prandtl
50
1
0.3
104
explore mesh refinement up to 3200 zones per linear dimension. To keep the
computational burden manageable, we restrict the simulations to 2D and we
restrict the 2D mesh resolution to the finest resolution presently used for 3D
simulations.
The emphasis on the joint probability distribution function (pdf) of concentration and temperature as micro scale observables is motivated by problems in turbulent combustion [47], where these variables affect the local flame
speed and the overall flow.
The subgrid models are not original here, but their use in flow simulations
having numerically sharp gradients appears to be new. In this sense, we are
outside of the known domain of validity of the subgrid models, and the present
work serves as a verification (i.e. mesh convergence with full resolution of the
momentum equation) study.
At least for the present problem, with its somewhat modest number of
initial modes, the joint pdf for concentration and temperature are subject to
statistical fluctuations. In other words, the spatial averaging over the mixing
zone is not sufficient to obtain statistical convergence, and an ensemble of
35
sions are interpreted in terms of binning the data, generally into 10 bins per
variable. We observe mesh convergence. Other definitions of convergence give
36
similar results, except that when the error is well below the level of ensemble
variability (realization to realization variation), convergence may be obscured
by chance cancellations giving unrealistically small net error on coarse grids.
The error definition chosen minimizes such cancellations.
To summarize, the main goal of this paper is to introduce and verify parameterized subgrid models for turbulent mass, momentum and thermal diffusion which will capture unresolved diffusive phenomena as it impacts coarse
grid scales in a LES having steep numerical gradients. In this way, we plan to
achieve LES which are converging relative to both the macro and the micro
observables mentioned above. The simulations are more efficient than those
of conventional turbulence models in the narrow width in mesh units that
they allow for sharp gradient concentration transitions. They model turbulent transport with microscopic observables correctly computed, in contrast
to many capturing simulations. These subgrid models are applied here in a
new context, namely to a front tracking and shock capturing Godunov scheme
which maintains sharp gradients.
The front tracking code FronTier can achieve arbitrarily high Schmidt
and Prandtl numbers numerically without a requirement for mesh refinement
beyond that needed to resolve the momentum equation. This is not the case
for most (untracked) simulation codes. Numerical mass and thermal diffusion
arises primarily within the Eulerian hyperbolic step, due to solution averaging over grid blocks associated with transport by a nonzero velocity field (i.e.
hyperbolic transport). This apparently universal feature of untracked Eulerian conservative capturing codes is circumvented with front tracking. Subgrid
37
models can only add diffusion, and can never remove it. In this sense, a subgrid model for mass or thermal diffusion cannot cure the problem of excess
numerical diffusion to achieve accurate modeling of atomic scale mixing. A
conventional untracked code must be run in an over resolved mode, with
more resolution than the momentum equation requires, to achieve low levels
of numerical mass or thermal diffusion in the concentration and energy equations. In other words, conventional untracked codes require that the simulations be resolved or convergent in terms of the continuity, species and energy
equations as well as for the momentum equation. The use of front tracking,
however, avoids or reduces numerical diffusion in the species, continuity, and
energy equations, even for coarse grids, and thus requires DNS or LES type
convergence of the momentum equation alone.
We also point to the conclusions of Chapter. 4, in which the macro variables (mixing zone edge positions, shock trajectories, etc.) are insensitive to
physical or numerical modeling issues, and thus presumably to the choice of
the subgrid model for viscosity, or to the viscosity and Reynolds number itself.
Thus our convergence studies will focus primarily on the micro variables: the
joint pdfs for species concentration and temperature and on a typical chemical
reaction rate. We will examine the degree to which these are insensitive to
Reynolds number for LES, and to mesh for a fixed Reynolds number LES.
There is a large literature concerning turbulent mixing in RM unstable
flows. Most of this literature focuses on macro observables, such as the mixing
zone edges and shock trajectories. For RM mixing, these macro observables are
insensitive, in that we find generically agreement among theory, experiment
38
39
Figure 3.4: Chemical reaction rate at t = 90 for three representative values for
the transport parameters, and each for three values of the Reynolds number.
The activation temperature is chosen as 15, 000oK. The point of this plot is
the strikingly different values obtained for hwi for the nine physical regimes
considered here.
40
Chapter 4
0.4
400x800 Liquid case
400x800 Gas case
400x800 Plasma case
800x1600 Liquid case
800x1600 Gas case
800x1600 Plasma case
1600x3200 Liquid case
1600x3200 Gas case
1600x3200 Plasma case
0.3
0.2
0.1
10
-2
10
-1
Kmesh
10
10
Figure 4.1: Time integrated relative discrepancy in the mixing zone edge locations as compared to a fine grid, zero transport simulation. The discrepancy,
for cases l and g, is mainly due to mesh errors and is partly due to modification of physical parameters. The discrepancy decreases with mesh refinement,
uniformly as physical parameters are varied. The plasma case p shows convergence, but to a Reynolds number dependent limit distinct (for small Re) from
the zero transport case.
42
16
10
8
0.4
0.3
12
Cmesh
0.5
14
0.2
6
4
0.1
2
0
10-2
10-1
Kmesh
100
101
0 -4
10
10
-3
10
-2
10
-1
Figure 4.2: Left: plot of C /x vs. Kmesh for a range of mesh levels and
transport parameters cases l, g, p from Table 3.1, at t = 90, r = rmid . Right:
the same data replotted as C vs. K .
4.1
l
Re
300
6000
600K
D/Dt
0.031
0.002
1.54 105
g
/t
0.051
0.003
3.41 105
D/Dt
39.2
1.82
0.015
p
/t D/Dt
10.4
732
0.307 9.57
0.002 0.040
/t
4.16 106
1.32 104
27.1
observe that C
mesh
mesh x,
8
7
(D+Dt)/C
6
5
4
(T+Tt)/C
3
2
10
10
10
10
10
1
0 -4
10
10
-3
10
-2
10
10 -4
10
-1
10
-3
10
-2
10
-1
Figure 4.3: The ratios (D + Dt )/C and (T + Tt )/C vs. K for several
mesh levels and for transport coefficients cases l, g, p from Table 3.1. The
values to the far right in each frame are momemtum-resolved, and appear to
be mesh converged for the finer meshes.
The ratios are also mesh convergent for higher Re (in the LES regime)
and nearly independent of Re. Fig. 4.3 shows the success of the subgrid model,
with the mesh converged LES in excellent agreement with momentum-resolved
simulations.
It is interesting to compare the ratios of molecular to turbulent length
scales. The factor t t0 cancels and the ratio is just the ratio of the diffusion
coefficients, molecular to turbulent. In Table 4.1, we give the ratios of molecular to turbulent transport properties. The ratios are mesh and Reynolds
number dependent. Turbulent transport terms are defined in terms of subgrid
velocity correlations (with concentration, velocity, or temperature) and are
thus logically independent of molecular transport. We tabulate results for the
finest mesh only. For the momentum-resolved simulations, the turbulent viscosity terms are neglible, and for high Reynolds number, the turbulent terms
45
are dominant. Consistent with this picture, we note the virtual identity of the
high Reynolds data in Fig. 4.3, at least for the liquid and gas cases.
46
Chapter 5
Convergence of Micro Observables
5.1
Joint PDFs
The joint pdf for the temperature and species mass concentrations of the
fluid mixture is defined as a function of time, assuming that the probability data is collected from the spatial variation of a single realization (single
realization of the intial conditions) within the mixing zone. Mixed cells are
not averaged, but each cell fraction contributes its own concentration fraction and temperature with its own probabilities (proportional to area). The
concentration fractions and temperatures are then binned, with 10 bins per
variable.
The liquid and gas joint pdfs are bimodal. Both are concentrated near a
curve in concentration-temperature space, joining the light to the heavy fluid
concentrations. The origin of this shape can be explained by shock heating,
which tends to heat the heavy fluid more strongly, according to the properties of the assumed EOS for the two fluids. This trend is reinforced by the
initial conditions; initially the heavy fluid is hotter. Then portions of the
47
0.4
probability
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
9577
1
temperature
24705
Figure 5.1: Case l. The joint pdf of light species concentration and temperature
at time t = 90. The data has been collected into 10 10 bins. The mesh is
1600 3200 and Re 6000.
heavy and light fluid diffuse into one another, so that the temperature pdf at
fixed concentration is determined from the temperature pdf of the pure fluids before mixture through diffusion. The plasma joint pdf is bimodal in its
dependence on concentrations, while its temperature dependence is unimodal.
See Figs. 5.1, 5.2, 5.3. The data presented is from the time t = 90, which is
the beginning of the chaotic stage of interface development.
The joint pdfs for temperature-concentration with common physics at
three mesh levels are qualitatively similar, and show signs of convergence. See
Table 5.1. The mixed region displays some number of large blobs of poorly
mixed light material. The relative size of these regions is statistically variable.
The errors quoted are measured in the Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric, i.e., the
L norm of the difference of the associated probability distribution functions.
48
0.4
probability
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
10405
1
temperature
21543
Figure 5.2: Case g. The joint pdf of light species concentration and temperature at time t = 90. The data has been collected into 10 10 bins. The mesh
is 1600 3200 and Re 6000.
0.4
probability
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
15375
1
temperature
16511
Figure 5.3: Case p. The joint pdf of light species concentration and temperature at time t = 90. The data has been collected into 10 10 bins. The mesh
is 1600 3200 and Re 3000.
49
l
Re
300
6000
600K
c to f m to f c to f m to f c to f m to f
0.24
0.13
0.08
0.06
0.57
0.31
0.07
0.06
0.09
0.05
0.68
0.41
0.26
0.06
0.22
0.09
0.14
0.10
Table 5.1: Mesh errors for the joint temperature-concentration pdfs to illustrate possibilities of mesh convergence. Comparison is coarse (c) to fine (f)
and medium (m) to fine with pdfs compared using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov
metric. Various physical cases reported.
We compute with three distinct meshes (400800, 8001600 and 16003200)
for the cases l, g, and p. Thus there are two levels of error for each case.
The listed Reynolds numbers are approximate, and the refinements are
performed (within each series of approximately constant Reynolds number)
with identical molecular level transport coefficients. Thus the mesh refinement
occurs within identically specified physics. The observed Reynolds numbers
and the subgrid scale turbulent transport parameters are mesh dependent, and
do vary within this comparison.
5.2
Concentration Moments
Although the errors in the pdfs decrease with mesh refinement, they are
not uniformly small, and in the worst cases are as large as the pdfs themselves.
For this reason, we next consider a more highly averaged analysis of the same
simulation data.
50
hf1 f2 i
,
hf1 i hf2 i
(5.1)
(5.2)
(T ) =
hf1 f2 iT
.
hf1 iT hf2 iT
51
(5.3)
l
300
6000
600K
0.06
0.15
0.07
Table 5.2: Mesh errors for (T ), defined by the weighted L1 norm (5.4). Comparison is coarse (c) to fine (f) and medium (m) to fine. Various physical cases
reported.
The result is shown in the nine frames of Fig. 5.4. We note that the gas
case has values (T ) 0.6 0.8 over most of the temperature range. Aside
from a peak (T ) value associated with the lowest and highest T values (caused
by unmixed fluid), most of the (T ) range displays very little temperature
dependence. Because the defined conventionally by a spatial average hi
(not constrained to a fixed T value) as in (5.1) is distinct from (T ), we
include the value in each frame of Fig. 5.4. The values are generally
lower than those obtained in other simulations for related problems. This fact
reflects the elimination of numerical mass diffusion in our simulations and a
greater occurrence of blobs of unmixed or poorly mixed fluid than is commonly
observed numerically.
e=
9
X
wi |ic if |
(5.4)
i=0
l
Re
300
6000
600K
c to f m to f c to f m to f c to f m to f
0.29
0.16
0.06
0.03
0.07
0.01
0.08
0.07
0.10
0.06
0.20
0.08
0.13
0.03
0.18
0.07
0.03
0.04
Table 5.3: Mesh errors for the specific chemical production w for an activation
temperature TAC = 8, 000oK. The comparison, based on the Kolmogorov-Smirnov matric, shows mesh convergence. The comparison is coarse mesh (c)
to fine (f) and medium (m) to fine. Various physical cases reported.
the coarse to fine comparison) as
wi =
5.3
uci + ufi
.
2
(5.5)
Temperature PDF
Encouraged by the fact that the variable (T ) is mesh convergent, as a
factor contributing to the chemistry production term w, we next take the step
of analyzing the pdf for T . By definition, this pdf (which we denote p(T )), is
the number of sample points in a T bin per degree size for the width of the
bin in degrees Kelvin. We plot the pdf for T , in Fig. 5.5, for various physical
cases.
Again the convergence properties are visually encouraging. Pursuing
this point, we tabulate the mesh convergence errors, as measured in the
Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric, for the pure T pdf, to show grid convergence,
see Table 5.4. The errors for the T pdf are defined as in (5.4).
53
0.4
400x800 =0.25
800x1600 =0.16
1600x3200 =0.16
14000
16000
18000
temperature (K)
0.4
20000
12000
14000
16000
18000
temperature (K)
0.6
0.4
20000
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.6
0.6
0.6
400x800 =0.61
800x1600 =0.58
1600x3200 =0.56
0.2
0
13500
15000
16500
temperature (K)
18000
()
0.4
0.4
400x800 =0.48
800x1600 =0.48
1600x3200 =0.50
0.2
0
19500
12000
14000
16000
18000
temperature (K)
0.8
0.8
0.8
0.6
0.6
0.6
400x800 =0.43
800x1600 =0.39
1600x3200 =0.38
10900
10950
11000
temperature (K)
11050
()
()
0.2
400x800 =0.30
800x1600 =0.36
1600x3200 =0.42
0.2
0
15600
15800
16000
16200
temperature (K)
16400
15000
18000
24000
400x800 =0.45
800x1600 =0.47
1600x3200 =0.52
12000
15000
18000
temperature (K)
21000
0.4
0.2
0
10000
400x800 =0.53
800x1600 =0.60
1600x3200 =0.62
12500
15000
17500
temperature (K)
Figure 5.4: Plot of (T ) vs. T . Cases l, g, p (rows 1 to 3), with Re increasing, left to right. Error bars indicate coarse grid ensemble fluctuation (2)
centered at the ensemble mean, for cases l, g only.
54
21000
temperature (K)
0.2
20000
0.4
12000
0.4
0.4
400x800 =0.45
800x1600 =0.48
1600x3200 =0.50
0.2
400x800 =0.42
800x1600 =0.42
1600x3200 =0.35
0.2
()
()
12000
0.6
()
0.6
0.2
()
0.8
0.8
()
()
0.8
20000
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
12000
14000
16000
18000
temperature (K)
0.1
0.3
0.2
0.1
13500
15000
16500
temperature (K)
18000
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
12000
14000
16000
18000
temperature (K)
0.2
0.1
10900
10950
11000
temperature (K)
11050
0.3
0.2
0.1
15000
18000
21000
temperature (K)
24000
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
12000
15000
18000
temperature (K)
21000
0.6
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
12000
0.5
20000
0.6
0.4
0.3
0.6
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.5
19500
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.5
0.4
0.4
0.2
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.5
temperature (K)
0.6
0.3
0.6
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.5
0.4
20000
0.6
0.5
15600
15800
16000
16200
temperature (K)
16400
0.6
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.6
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.6
400x800
800x1600
1600x3200
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
10000
12500
15000
Figure 5.5: Plot of T pdf. Cases l, g, p (rows 1 to 3), with Re increasing, left
to right.
55
17500
temperature (K)
20000
l
Re
300
6000
600K
c to f m to f c to f m to f c to f m to f
0.13
0.08
0.05
0.05
0.57
0.31
0.07
0.03
0.07
0.04
0.68
0.41
0.27
0.06
0.23
0.07
0.13
0.09
Table 5.4: Errors for the temperature pdfs measured in the Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric show mesh convergence. Comparison is coarse mesh (c) to fine
(f) and medium (m) to fine. Various physical cases reported.
We note an important distinction between the case p and the cases l and
g. For the high thermally diffusive case p, the range of temperatures spatially
is very narrow. Accordingly, the convergence of the pdfs in this case is rather
like convergence of near delta functions, and as the mesh is varied, there can
even be only partial overlap in the temperature ranges observed. The Reynolds
number dependence is significant in case p but is weak in cases l and g.
5.4
Chemical Production
Finally, we combine the separate analysis of (T ) and T to estimate a
convergence rate for the pdf for the specific chemical production w, assuming
arbitrarily activation temperatures TAC = 8, 000o K and 15, 000o K. Here,
TAC = 8, 000o K is lower than the range of observed temperatures, while
TAC = 15, 000oK is in the middle of the observed temperatures (cases l, g
only).
We list convergence properties for the w pdf, based on the KolmogorovSmirnov metric in Tables 5.3 and 5.5. The evidence is encouraging, and sug56
Re
300
6000
600K
l
g
2/ hwi c to f m to f 2/ hwi c to f
0.24
0.04
0.03
0.29
0.03
0.49
0.04
0.04
0.45
0.03
0.25
0.09
0.03
0.25
0.09
m to f
0.02
0.04
0.05
Table 5.5: Relative coarse grid ensemble fluctuations (2) divided by ensemble mean, and mesh errors for the specific chemical production w for an activation temperature TAC = 15, 000oK. Comparison based on the Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric. Comparison is coarse mesh (c) to fine (f) and medium (m) to
fine. Only cases l and g are reported.
gests convergence, subject to additional mesh refinement. The random variable
w displays not only spatical variablity, but also ensemble (realization to realization) variability. Because the temperature range in case p is small, and
varies (even to the point of being non-overlapping) as Re and the mesh is
varied, it does not seem realistic to choose a TAC within the range of observed
temperatures. Accordingly, we omit case p from Table 5.5.
5.5
gence, with a few cases showing only marginal convergence. For this reason
we examine the mesh convergence more closely. First, we looked at errors
or randomness associated with the binning process. The results did not show
significant sensitivity to the binning. Next we examined the radial dependence
of the convergence. We found a significant radial dependence on the temperature, a consequence of the fact that the heavy material is hotter than the light.
57
0.04
<w>
0.03
0.02
0.01
radius
Figure 5.6: Radial dependence for hwi for the case l, Re 6000.
So the temperature and w, considered as a function of r, is biased towards the
outer portion of the mixing zone. See Fig. 5.6. Finally, we considered the relative importance of mesh errors and statistical fluctuations. For the coarsest
grid, and for cases l and g only, we introduced a modest ensemble (6 realizations) defined by randomly selected initial perturbations of the interface.
We find that the mesh errors are very small, and are dominated by random
fluctuations (magnitude defined as 2 for this small ensemble). Thus we believe that the observed error fluctuations are probably chance events, rather
than indicating convergence or its absence. The spatial variabiity of the point
values of w, as indicated by its spatial coefficient of variation, typically 100%
or more, shows the importance but not the sufficiency of spatial averages.
58
Chapter 6
If it is true that numerical solutions to the Euler equations are underdetermined, and that the convergence process produces new structures on each
length scale, what is the consequence of these facts for a mathematical existence theory for these equations? It would appear that if such a mathematical
solution were to exist, it might not be a function, but a generalized function in
the sense of compensated compactness. The compensated compactness generalized functions are pdfs depending on space and time, not dissimilar from
what is observed computationally. In the one dimensional existence theory of
compensated compactness of DiPerna [45, 46] and Ding and co-workers [4, 8],
the first and easier step is to show existence of the generalized solution. The
more difficult second step is to show that a generalized solution is a classical
(weak) one. In view of the slow rate of progress with the existence theory in
two dimensions, and in view of the possibility that this second step might not
be correct, it is worth trying to establish generalized compensated compact59
ness solutions without the step of passing to a classical one. Typically such
proofs are based on compactness, a method of proof which yields existence but
not uniqueness for the weak solutions. We have already commented on the
possible nonuniqueness of solutions to the Euler equations. We also note that
weak solutions in the form of a space time dependent pdf for the primitive
variables are actually what is required scientifically for a combustion simulation. For this reason, such pdf weak solutions couple into the requirements of
computational physics, whether they are required as a fundamental scientific
truth or not.
60
Chapter 7
Conclusion
Our most important conclusion is a converging trend for the micro observables for a strongly chaotic mixing flow: reshocked Richtmyer-Meshkov
instability. The micro variable mesh convergence is partly obscured by statistical fluctuations, as noted below and in the body of the paper. New computational strategies and new methods of data analysis were required to reach
this goal. We have combined (and enhanced) the resolution of sharp gradients
near discontinuities of capturing codes with the subgrid physics modeling accuracy of turbulence codes. The convergence properties are basically uniform
in Schmidt and Prandtl number. As far as the authors are aware, results of
this nature have not been reported by others.
A striking feature of the results is their relative independence on the
Reynolds number, allowed to vary by a factor of 2000. Also significant is the
strong dependence of the mixing properties of the simulation on the physical regimes with their distinct Schmidt and Prandtl numbers. The impact of
diffusion within the simulations is generally lower than commonly reported
61
on the basis of under resolved untracked capturing codes. Such codes substitute numerical transport properties for physical ones. The actual numerical
transport values are not documented, but it is safe to guess that the effective
numerical Schmidt and Prandtl numbers are mainly less than one, and thus
more diffusive than the present gas case.
These trends in the diffusive properties of the solutions are predicted by
the trends in the (D + Dt )/C and (T + Tt )/C ratios. In other words,
elementary one dimensional diffusion analysis, coupled with a statistical characterization of the flow geometry, is sufficient to predict the major trends
observed. We refer to the plot of these ratios in Figs. 4.3.
As new modes of data analysis, we have introduced the importance of
convergence for the microscopic variables. These are subject to statistical
fluctuations which obscure mesh convergence. Some level of averaging is desirable, but we preserve important nonlinear functionals of the data, for which
simple averaging is meaningless. This leads to the ensemble labeled by concentration and temperature values rather than by spatial coordinates. Using this
framework and the typical observable of a chemical reaction rate, we observe
a reduction of statistical fluctuation and an appearantly converged pdf for the
specific chemical reaction rate.
62
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