4.7 Article

A combined volume penalization / selective frequency damping approach for immersed boundary methods applied to high-order schemes

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS
Volume 472, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcp.2022.111678

Keywords

Immersed boundary method; Selective frequency damping; Volume penalization; High -order method; Flux reconstruction

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There has been a recent growing interest in developing efficient immersed boundary methods (IBM) based on Cartesian grids in the context of high-order methods. This work proposes an improvement for high-order solvers based on flux reconstruction by introducing a selective frequency damping (SFD) method to suppress spurious oscillations. Numerical properties are studied through eigensolution analysis and demonstrate the advantages of using the SFD method as an alternative to traditional volume penalization, as well as the beneficial properties of combining both approaches. The new approach is applied to simulate steady and unsteady flow scenarios, showing the improved accuracy provided by the SFD method.
There has been an increasing interest in developing efficient immersed boundary method (IBM) based on Cartesian grids, recently in the context of high-order methods. IBM based on volume penalization is a robust and easy to implement method to avoid body-fitted meshes and has been recently adapted to high order discretizations [1]. This work proposes an improvement over the classic penalty formulation for high-order solvers based on flux reconstruction. We include a selective frequency damping (SFD) approach [2] acting only inside solid body defined through the immersed boundary masking, to damp spurious oscillations. An encapsulated formulation for the SFD method is implemented, which can be used as a wrapper around an existing time-stepping code. The numerical properties have been studied through eigensolution analysis based on the advection equation. These studies not only show the advantages of using the SFD method as an alternative of the traditional volume penalization, but also show the favorable properties of combining both approaches. This new approach is then applied to the Navier-Stokes equation to simulate steady flow past an airfoil and unsteady flow past a circular cylinder. The advantages of the SFD method in providing improved accuracy are reported.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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