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Adaptive clipping‐and‐redistribution algorithms for bounded and conservative high‐order interpolations applied to discontinuous and reactive flows

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https://doi.org/10.1002/fld.5165Creative Commons 'BY' version 4.0 license
Abstract

A new adaptive clipping-and-redistribution method is presented which provides bounds-preservation for multidimensional interpolation in the context of high-order finite-volume discretizations with adaptive mesh refinement (AMR). The underlying finite-volume method (FVM) for the computational fluid dynamics applications is fourth-order accurate for smooth solutions and utilizes AMR for computational efficiency in solving multiscale problems involving turbulence and combustion. High-order interpolation between different AMR levels is required. However, this operation often leads to numerical issues because combustion species must have physical bounds preserved. The present study overcomes two major challenges in the development of the high-order interpolation method. First, the method needs to be bound-preserving near extrema or discontinuities to prevent the emergence of unphysical oscillations while maintaining fourth-order accuracy in smooth flows. Second, the method needs to satisfy the conservation requirement in multiple dimensions, particularly in the context of curvilinear coordinate transformations. Additionally, the method is designed to be localized and computationally inexpensive. The new interpolation scheme is demonstrated by solving reacting flows, which are extremely sensitive to unphysical overshoots in conserved quantities. The test problems are shock-induced (Formula presented.) - (Formula presented.) combustion and a (Formula presented.) -air flame in a practical bluff-body combustor. Results show the method prevents new extrema near discontinuities while maintaining high-order accuracy in smooth regions. In particular, the method is extremely beneficial for combustion with stiff chemistry. With the proposed new method, even if flame fronts cross AMR interfaces or new grids are created in the vicinity of the flame, solution stability is retained.

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