Publication | Closed Access
A Guide to the Implementation of Boundary Conditions in Compact High-Order Methods for Compressible Aerodynamics
55
Citations
12
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
Numerical AnalysisEngineeringFluid MechanicsCompressible AerodynamicsNavier-stokes EquationsCompact High-order MethodsComputational MechanicsBoundary LayerRiemann InvariantCompressible FlowBoundary ConditionsNumerical SimulationBoundary Element MethodMethod Of Fundamental SolutionIncompressible FlowRiemann ProblemComputer EngineeringComputational Fluid DynamicsMultiphase FlowNumerical Method For Partial Differential EquationAerospace EngineeringAerodynamics
The nature of boundary conditions, and how they are implemented, can have a significant impact on the stability and accuracy of a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) solver. The objective of this paper is to assess how different boundary conditions impact the performance of compact discontinuous high-order spectral element methods (such as the discontinuous Galerkin method and the Flux Reconstruction approach), when these schemes are used to solve the Euler and compressible Navier-Stokes equations on unstructured grids. Specifically, the paper will investigate inflow/outflow and wall boundary conditions. In all studies the boundary conditions were enforced by modifying the boundary flux. For Riemann invariant (characteristic), slip and no-slip conditions we have considered a direct and an indirect enforcement of the boundary conditions, the first obtained by calculating the flux using the known solution at the given boundary while the second achieved by using a ghost state and by solving a Riemann problem. All computations were performed using the open-source software Nektar++ (www.nektar.info).
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