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Biography

Prof.  Sergey I.  Martynenko
Federal Research Center of Problems of Chemical Physics and Medicinal Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences,  Russia

Title: A New Approach to Mathematical Modeling of Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer

Abstract:

The main trends in modern mathematical modeling are construction of more accurate submodels of the individual physical and chemical processes and development of black-box software for solving the industrial problems (multiphysics simulation). For black-box software, it is necessary to construct the mathematical models with the least number of assumptions and the computational algorithms with the least number of problem-dependent components for numerical solution of the (initial-)boundary value problems [1].

       The mathematical description of liquid or gas motion is based on the continuum approximation at [2]. The continuum is a hypothetical continuous medium that is similar to real liquid or gas in macro scale. Any part of continuum is continuum. Traditionally, the fluid dynamics equations are obtained based on the conservation laws (mass, pulse, energy and others) and phenomenological laws (Newton’s law of viscosity, Fourier's law of heat transfer and others) for an arbitrary finite volume in a flow. Reduction of the finite volume to point leads to the Navier-Stokes equations. In this case, all macroparameters (density, pressure, temperature and others) lose their physical meaning (). In addition, all functions must be sufficiently differentiable. Leonhard Euler used differential and integral calculus to solve these governing differential equations in engineering applications.

       To overcome the above mentioned physical difficulties, it is proposed to reduce the finite volumes only until  This makes it possible to describe the motion of liquids or gases without partial derivatives and additional requirements for the smoothness of functions. It is shown that all functions are constant inside the finite volumes and discontinuous on its faces. The discontinuities of the solutions of the governing equations define the discontinuous approximation to mathematical description of liquid or gas motion. The governing equations for  are exact, and the classical (differential) Navier-Stokes equations are approximate, where  is the maximum permissible Knudsen number for the given problem at which the molecular structure of matter can be ignored. The discontinuous (derivatives-free) descriptions of the liquids or gases motion are not only more physically justified, but also more convenient for computer simulation: the governing equations and their discrete analogue coincide for the diffusion problems and are close for the convective-diffusion problems.

       The absence of partial derivatives significantly simplifies numerical solution of the governing equations; this allows one to avoid using the finite element method, the finite difference method, high-order difference schemes and other numerical methods for solving (initial-)boundary value problems. In addition, the proposed approach fits well with the agglomeration-based multigrid methods [3].

       Thus, the proposed discontinuous approach to describing the liquid and gas motion will not only allow us to avoid assumptions of physical nature, but also to combine the discretization of the governing equations and effective multigrid method for their parallel solution into unified computing technology for black-box software.

 

Acknowledgments

The work is funded by Russian Foundation for Basic Research (project «Development
and application of high-performance parallel algorithms for supercomputer modeling of complex reaction flows», project code 21-51-46007) and Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye (TÜBİTAK), Grant №: ARDEB-220N170.

 

References  

1. Martynenko S. I. Numerical Methods for Black-Box Software in Computational Continuum
Mechanics: Parallel High-Performance Computing. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023, 136 p.

https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111319568

2. Xu K. Direct modeling for computational fluid dynamics. Acta Mechanica Sinica. V.31, 2015. pp. 303–318. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10409-015-0453-2

3. Martynenko S. I. Modeling of heat and mass transfer in the discontinuum approximation,
Vestnik Udmurtskogo Universiteta. Matematika. Mekhanika. Komp’yuternye Nauki, 2024 (in Russian, in print)

Biography:

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