Publication | Open Access
Theoretical Analysis of the No-Slip Boundary Condition Enforcement in SPH Methods
103
Citations
15
References
2011
Year
Numerical AnalysisFinite Element MethodDifferential OperatorsMethod Of Fundamental SolutionEngineeringTheoretical AnalysisPhysicsFree Boundary ProblemRepresentative Mirroring TechniquesHyperbolic Conservation LawNumerical SimulationSph MethodsGhost ParticlesComputational MechanicsBoundary Element MethodNumerical Method For Partial Differential Equation
The aim of the present work is to provide an in-depth analysis of the most representative mirroring techniques used in SPH to enforce boundary conditions (BC) along solid profiles. We specifically refer to dummy particles, ghost particles, and Takeda et al. [Prog. Theor. Phys. 92 (1994), 939] boundary integrals. The analysis has been carried out by studying the convergence of the first- and second-order differential operators as the smoothing length (that is, the characteristic length on which relies the SPH interpolation) decreases. These differential operators are of fundamental importance for the computation of the viscous drag and the viscous/diffusive terms in the momentum and energy equations. It has been proved that close to the boundaries some of the mirroring techniques leads to intrinsic inaccuracies in the convergence of the differential operators. A consistent formulation has been derived starting from Takeda et al. boundary integrals (see the above reference). This original formulation allows implementing no-slip boundary conditions consistently in many practical applications as viscous flows and diffusion problems.
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