Publication | Open Access
Implicit Monte Carlo with a Linear Discontinuous Finite Element Material Solution and Piecewise Non-Constant Opacity
13
Citations
23
References
2016
Year
Numerical AnalysisImc ParticlesRadiative Heat TransferEngineeringNumerical TeleportationMaterial SimulationComputational MechanicsThermal RadiationRadiative TransferNumerical SimulationPiecewise Non-constant OpacityTransport PhenomenaModeling And SimulationThermodynamicsBoundary Element MethodPhysicsMonte CarloRadiative AbsorptionInverse ProblemsHeat TransferImplicit Monte CarloRadiative Transfer ModellingFinite Element MethodImc MethodNatural SciencesMonte Carlo MethodApplied PhysicsThermal EngineeringMultiscale Modeling
The non-linear thermal radiative-transfer equations can be solved in various ways. One popular way is the Fleck and Cummings Implicit Monte Carlo (IMC) method. The IMC method was originally formulated with piecewise-constant material properties. For domains with a coarse spatial grid and large temperature gradients, an error known as numerical teleportation may cause artificially non-causal energy propagation and consequently an inaccurate material temperature. Source tilting is a technique to reduce teleportation error by constructing sub-spatial-cell (or sub-cell) emission profiles from which IMC particles are sampled. Several source tilting schemes exist, but some allow teleportation error to persist. We examine the effect of source tilting in problems with a temperature-dependent opacity. Within each cell, the opacity is evaluated continuously from a temperature profile implied by the source tilt. For IMC, this is a new approach to modeling the opacity. We find that applying both source tilting along with a source tilt-dependent opacity can introduce another dominant error that overly inhibits thermal wavefronts. We show that we can mitigate both teleportation and under-propagation errors if we discretize the temperature equation with a linear discontinuous (LD) trial space. Our method is for opacities ∼ 1/T3, but we formulate and test a slight extension for opacities ∼ 1/T3.5, where T is temperature. We find our method avoids errors that can be incurred by IMC with continuous source tilt constructions and piecewise-constant material temperature updates.
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