Publications

Results 26–50 of 171

Search results

Jump to search filters

High resolution viscous fingering simulation in miscible displacement using a p-adaptive discontinuous Galerkin method with algebraic multigrid preconditioner

Journal of Computational Physics

Becker, G.; Siefert, Christopher S.; Tuminaro, Raymond S.; Sun, H.; Valiveti, D.M.; Mohan, A.; Yin, J.; Huang, H.

High resolution simulation of viscous fingering can offer an accurate and detailed prediction for subsurface engineering processes involving fingering phenomena. The fully implicit discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method has been shown to be an accurate and stable method to model viscous fingering with high Peclet number and mobility ratio. In this paper, we present two techniques to speedup large scale simulations of this kind. The first technique relies on a simple p-adaptive scheme in which high order basis functions are employed only in elements near the finger fronts where the concentration has a sharp change. As a result, the number of degrees of freedom is significantly reduced and the simulation yields almost identical results to the more expensive simulation with uniform high order elements throughout the mesh. The second technique for speedup involves improving the solver efficiency. We present an algebraic multigrid (AMG) preconditioner which allows the DG matrix to leverage the robust AMG preconditioner designed for the continuous Galerkin (CG) finite element method. The resulting preconditioner works effectively for fixed order DG as well as p-adaptive DG problems. With the improvements provided by the p-adaptivity and AMG preconditioning, we can perform high resolution three-dimensional viscous fingering simulations required for miscible displacement with high Peclet number and mobility ratio in greater detail than before for well injection problems.

More Details

An algebraic multigrid method for Q2−Q1 mixed discretizations of the Navier–Stokes equations

Numerical Linear Algebra with Applications

Prokopenko, Andrey V.; Tuminaro, Raymond S.

Algebraic multigrid (AMG) preconditioners are considered for discretized systems of partial differential equations (PDEs) where unknowns associated with different physical quantities are not necessarily colocated at mesh points. Specifically, we investigate a Q2−Q1 mixed finite element discretization of the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations where the number of velocity nodes is much greater than the number of pressure nodes. Consequently, some velocity degrees of freedom (DOFs) are defined at spatial locations where there are no corresponding pressure DOFs. Thus, AMG approaches leveraging this colocated structure are not applicable. This paper instead proposes an automatic AMG coarsening that mimics certain pressure/velocity DOF relationships of the Q2−Q1 discretization. The main idea is to first automatically define coarse pressures in a somewhat standard AMG fashion and then to carefully (but automatically) choose coarse velocity unknowns so that the spatial location relationship between pressure and velocity DOFs resembles that on the finest grid. To define coefficients within the intergrid transfers, an energy minimization AMG (EMIN-AMG) is utilized. EMIN-AMG is not tied to specific coarsening schemes and grid transfer sparsity patterns, and so it is applicable to the proposed coarsening. Numerical results highlighting solver performance are given on Stokes and incompressible Navier–Stokes problems.

More Details

A matrix dependent/algebraic multigrid approach for extruded meshes with applications to ice sheet modeling

SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing

Tuminaro, Raymond S.; Perego, Mauro P.; Kalashnikova, Irina; Salinger, Andrew G.; Price, Stephen

A multigrid method is proposed that combines ideas from matrix dependent multigrid for structured grids and algebraic multigrid for unstructured grids. It targets problems where a three-dimensional mesh can be viewed as an extrusion of a two-dimensional, unstructured mesh in a third dimension. Our motivation comes from the modeling of thin structures via finite elements and, more specifically, the modeling of ice sheets. Extruded meshes are relatively common for thin structures and often give rise to anisotropic problems when the thin direction mesh spacing is much smaller than the broad direction mesh spacing. Within our approach, the first few multigrid hierarchy levels are obtained by applying matrix dependent multigrid to semicoarsen in a structured thin direction fashion. After sufficient structured coarsening, the resulting mesh contains only a single layer corresponding to a two-dimensional, unstructured mesh. Algebraic multigrid can then be employed in a standard manner to create further coarse levels, as the anisotropic phenomena is no longer present in the single layer problem. The overall approach remains fully algebraic, with the minor exception that some additional information is needed to determine the extruded direction. Furthermore, this facilitates integration of the solver with a variety of different extruded mesh applications.

More Details
Results 26–50 of 171
Results 26–50 of 171