xref: /libCEED/examples/fluids/index.md (revision ba59ac12ef3579eea938de09e332a3a266c3cc08)
1(example-petsc-navier-stokes)=
2
3# Compressible Navier-Stokes mini-app
4
5This example is located in the subdirectory {file}`examples/fluids`.
6It solves the time-dependent Navier-Stokes equations of compressible gas dynamics in a static Eulerian three-dimensional frame using unstructured high-order finite/spectral element spatial discretizations and explicit or implicit high-order time-stepping (available in PETSc).
7Moreover, the Navier-Stokes example has been developed using PETSc, so that the pointwise physics (defined at quadrature points) is separated from the parallelization and meshing concerns.
8
9## Running the mini-app
10
11```{include} README.md
12:start-after: inclusion-fluids-marker
13```
14## The Navier-Stokes equations
15
16The mathematical formulation (from {cite}`giraldoetal2010`, cf. SE3) is given in what follows.
17The compressible Navier-Stokes equations in conservative form are
18
19$$
20\begin{aligned}
21\frac{\partial \rho}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \bm{U} &= 0 \\
22\frac{\partial \bm{U}}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \left( \frac{\bm{U} \otimes \bm{U}}{\rho} + P \bm{I}_3 -\bm\sigma \right) + \rho g \bm{\hat k} &= 0 \\
23\frac{\partial E}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \left( \frac{(E + P)\bm{U}}{\rho} -\bm{u} \cdot \bm{\sigma} - k \nabla T \right) &= 0 \, , \\
24\end{aligned}
25$$ (eq-ns)
26
27where $\bm{\sigma} = \mu(\nabla \bm{u} + (\nabla \bm{u})^T + \lambda (\nabla \cdot \bm{u})\bm{I}_3)$ is the Cauchy (symmetric) stress tensor, with $\mu$ the dynamic viscosity coefficient, and $\lambda = - 2/3$ the Stokes hypothesis constant.
28In equations {eq}`eq-ns`, $\rho$ represents the volume mass density, $U$ the momentum density (defined as $\bm{U}=\rho \bm{u}$, where $\bm{u}$ is the vector velocity field), $E$ the total energy density (defined as $E = \rho e$, where $e$ is the total energy), $\bm{I}_3$ represents the $3 \times 3$ identity matrix, $g$ the gravitational acceleration constant, $\bm{\hat{k}}$ the unit vector in the $z$ direction, $k$ the thermal conductivity constant, $T$ represents the temperature, and $P$ the pressure, given by the following equation of state
29
30$$
31P = \left( {c_p}/{c_v} -1\right) \left( E - {\bm{U}\cdot\bm{U}}/{(2 \rho)} - \rho g z \right) \, ,
32$$ (eq-state)
33
34where $c_p$ is the specific heat at constant pressure and $c_v$ is the specific heat at constant volume (that define $\gamma = c_p / c_v$, the specific heat ratio).
35
36The system {eq}`eq-ns` can be rewritten in vector form
37
38$$
39\frac{\partial \bm{q}}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \bm{F}(\bm{q}) -S(\bm{q}) = 0 \, ,
40$$ (eq-vector-ns)
41
42for the state variables 5-dimensional vector
43
44$$
45\bm{q} =        \begin{pmatrix}            \rho \\            \bm{U} \equiv \rho \bm{ u }\\            E \equiv \rho e        \end{pmatrix}        \begin{array}{l}            \leftarrow\textrm{ volume mass density}\\            \leftarrow\textrm{ momentum density}\\            \leftarrow\textrm{ energy density}        \end{array}
46$$
47
48where the flux and the source terms, respectively, are given by
49
50$$
51\begin{aligned}
52\bm{F}(\bm{q}) &=
53\underbrace{\begin{pmatrix}
54    \bm{U}\\
55    {(\bm{U} \otimes \bm{U})}/{\rho} + P \bm{I}_3 \\
56    {(E + P)\bm{U}}/{\rho}
57\end{pmatrix}}_{\bm F_{\text{adv}}} +
58\underbrace{\begin{pmatrix}
590 \\
60-  \bm{\sigma} \\
61 - \bm{u}  \cdot \bm{\sigma} - k \nabla T
62\end{pmatrix}}_{\bm F_{\text{diff}}},\\
63S(\bm{q}) &=
64- \begin{pmatrix}
65    0\\
66    \rho g \bm{\hat{k}}\\
67    0
68\end{pmatrix}.
69\end{aligned}
70$$ (eq-ns-flux)
71
72Let the discrete solution be
73
74$$
75\bm{q}_N (\bm{x},t)^{(e)} = \sum_{k=1}^{P}\psi_k (\bm{x})\bm{q}_k^{(e)}
76$$
77
78with $P=p+1$ the number of nodes in the element $e$.
79We use tensor-product bases $\psi_{kji} = h_i(X_0)h_j(X_1)h_k(X_2)$.
80
81For the time discretization, we use two types of time stepping schemes.
82
83- Explicit time-stepping method
84
85  The following explicit formulation is solved with the adaptive Runge-Kutta-Fehlberg (RKF4-5) method by default (any explicit time-stepping scheme available in PETSc can be chosen at runtime)
86
87  $$
88  \bm{q}_N^{n+1} = \bm{q}_N^n + \Delta t \sum_{i=1}^{s} b_i k_i \, ,
89  $$
90
91  where
92
93  $$
94  \begin{aligned}
95     k_1 &= f(t^n, \bm{q}_N^n)\\
96     k_2 &= f(t^n + c_2 \Delta t, \bm{q}_N^n + \Delta t (a_{21} k_1))\\
97     k_3 &= f(t^n + c_3 \Delta t, \bm{q}_N^n + \Delta t (a_{31} k_1 + a_{32} k_2))\\
98     \vdots&\\
99     k_i &= f\left(t^n + c_i \Delta t, \bm{q}_N^n + \Delta t \sum_{j=1}^s a_{ij} k_j \right)\\
100  \end{aligned}
101  $$
102
103  and with
104
105  $$
106  f(t^n, \bm{q}_N^n) = - [\nabla \cdot \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N)]^n + [S(\bm{q}_N)]^n \, .
107  $$
108
109- Implicit time-stepping method
110
111  This time stepping method which can be selected using the option `-implicit` is solved with Backward Differentiation Formula (BDF) method by default (similarly, any implicit time-stepping scheme available in PETSc can be chosen at runtime).
112  The implicit formulation solves nonlinear systems for $\bm q_N$:
113
114  $$
115  \bm f(\bm q_N) \equiv \bm g(t^{n+1}, \bm{q}_N, \bm{\dot{q}}_N) = 0 \, ,
116  $$ (eq-ts-implicit-ns)
117
118  where the time derivative $\bm{\dot q}_N$ is defined by
119
120  $$
121  \bm{\dot{q}}_N(\bm q_N) = \alpha \bm q_N + \bm z_N
122  $$
123
124  in terms of $\bm z_N$ from prior state and $\alpha > 0$, both of which depend on the specific time integration scheme (backward difference formulas, generalized alpha, implicit Runge-Kutta, etc.).
125  Each nonlinear system {eq}`eq-ts-implicit-ns` will correspond to a weak form, as explained below.
126  In determining how difficult a given problem is to solve, we consider the Jacobian of {eq}`eq-ts-implicit-ns`,
127
128  $$
129  \frac{\partial \bm f}{\partial \bm q_N} = \frac{\partial \bm g}{\partial \bm q_N} + \alpha \frac{\partial \bm g}{\partial \bm{\dot q}_N}.
130  $$
131
132  The scalar "shift" $\alpha$ scales inversely with the time step $\Delta t$, so small time steps result in the Jacobian being dominated by the second term, which is a sort of "mass matrix", and typically well-conditioned independent of grid resolution with a simple preconditioner (such as Jacobi).
133  In contrast, the first term dominates for large time steps, with a condition number that grows with the diameter of the domain and polynomial degree of the approximation space.
134  Both terms are significant for time-accurate simulation and the setup costs of strong preconditioners must be balanced with the convergence rate of Krylov methods using weak preconditioners.
135
136To obtain a finite element discretization, we first multiply the strong form {eq}`eq-vector-ns` by a test function $\bm v \in H^1(\Omega)$ and integrate,
137
138$$
139\int_{\Omega} \bm v \cdot \left(\frac{\partial \bm{q}_N}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N) - \bm{S}(\bm{q}_N) \right) \,dV = 0 \, , \; \forall \bm v \in \mathcal{V}_p\,,
140$$
141
142with $\mathcal{V}_p = \{ \bm v(\bm x) \in H^{1}(\Omega_e) \,|\, \bm v(\bm x_e(\bm X)) \in P_p(\bm{I}), e=1,\ldots,N_e \}$ a mapped space of polynomials containing at least polynomials of degree $p$ (with or without the higher mixed terms that appear in tensor product spaces).
143
144Integrating by parts on the divergence term, we arrive at the weak form,
145
146$$
147\begin{aligned}
148\int_{\Omega} \bm v \cdot \left( \frac{\partial \bm{q}_N}{\partial t} - \bm{S}(\bm{q}_N) \right)  \,dV
149- \int_{\Omega} \nabla \bm v \!:\! \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N)\,dV & \\
150+ \int_{\partial \Omega} \bm v \cdot \bm{F}(\bm q_N) \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS
151  &= 0 \, , \; \forall \bm v \in \mathcal{V}_p \,,
152\end{aligned}
153$$ (eq-weak-vector-ns)
154
155where $\bm{F}(\bm q_N) \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}}$ is typically replaced with a boundary condition.
156
157:::{note}
158The notation $\nabla \bm v \!:\! \bm F$ represents contraction over both fields and spatial dimensions while a single dot represents contraction in just one, which should be clear from context, e.g., $\bm v \cdot \bm S$ contracts over fields while $\bm F \cdot \widehat{\bm n}$ contracts over spatial dimensions.
159:::
160
161We solve {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns` using a Galerkin discretization (default) or a stabilized method, as is necessary for most real-world flows.
162
163Galerkin methods produce oscillations for transport-dominated problems (any time the cell Péclet number is larger than 1), and those tend to blow up for nonlinear problems such as the Euler equations and (low-viscosity/poorly resolved) Navier-Stokes, in which case stabilization is necessary.
164Our formulation follows {cite}`hughesetal2010`, which offers a comprehensive review of stabilization and shock-capturing methods for continuous finite element discretization of compressible flows.
165
166- **SUPG** (streamline-upwind/Petrov-Galerkin)
167
168  In this method, the weighted residual of the strong form {eq}`eq-vector-ns` is added to the Galerkin formulation {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns`.
169  The weak form for this method is given as
170
171  $$
172  \begin{aligned}
173  \int_{\Omega} \bm v \cdot \left( \frac{\partial \bm{q}_N}{\partial t} - \bm{S}(\bm{q}_N) \right)  \,dV
174  - \int_{\Omega} \nabla \bm v \!:\! \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N)\,dV & \\
175  + \int_{\partial \Omega} \bm v \cdot \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N) \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS & \\
176  + \int_{\Omega} \nabla\bm v \tcolon\left(\frac{\partial \bm F_{\text{adv}}}{\partial \bm q}\right) \bm\tau \left( \frac{\partial \bm{q}_N}{\partial t} \, + \,
177  \nabla \cdot \bm{F} \, (\bm{q}_N) - \bm{S}(\bm{q}_N) \right) \,dV &= 0
178  \, , \; \forall \bm v \in \mathcal{V}_p
179  \end{aligned}
180  $$ (eq-weak-vector-ns-supg)
181
182  This stabilization technique can be selected using the option `-stab supg`.
183
184- **SU** (streamline-upwind)
185
186  This method is a simplified version of *SUPG* {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns-supg` which is developed for debugging/comparison purposes. The weak form for this method is
187
188  $$
189  \begin{aligned}
190  \int_{\Omega} \bm v \cdot \left( \frac{\partial \bm{q}_N}{\partial t} - \bm{S}(\bm{q}_N) \right)  \,dV
191  - \int_{\Omega} \nabla \bm v \!:\! \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N)\,dV & \\
192  + \int_{\partial \Omega} \bm v \cdot \bm{F}(\bm{q}_N) \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS & \\
193  + \int_{\Omega} \nabla\bm v \tcolon\left(\frac{\partial \bm F_{\text{adv}}}{\partial \bm q}\right) \bm\tau \nabla \cdot \bm{F} \, (\bm{q}_N) \,dV
194  & = 0 \, , \; \forall \bm v \in \mathcal{V}_p
195  \end{aligned}
196  $$ (eq-weak-vector-ns-su)
197
198  This stabilization technique can be selected using the option `-stab su`.
199
200In both {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns-su` and {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns-supg`, $\bm\tau \in \mathbb R^{5\times 5}$ (field indices) is an intrinsic time scale matrix.
201The SUPG technique and the operator $\frac{\partial \bm F_{\text{adv}}}{\partial \bm q}$ (rather than its transpose) can be explained via an ansatz for subgrid state fluctuations $\tilde{\bm q} = -\bm\tau \bm r$ where $\bm r$ is a strong form residual.
202The forward variational form can be readily expressed by differentiating $\bm F_{\text{adv}}$ of {eq}`eq-ns-flux`
203
204$$
205\begin{aligned}
206\diff\bm F_{\text{adv}}(\diff\bm q; \bm q) &= \frac{\partial \bm F_{\text{adv}}}{\partial \bm q} \diff\bm q \\
207&= \begin{pmatrix}
208\diff\bm U \\
209(\diff\bm U \otimes \bm U + \bm U \otimes \diff\bm U)/\rho - (\bm U \otimes \bm U)/\rho^2 \diff\rho + \diff P \bm I_3 \\
210(E + P)\diff\bm U/\rho + (\diff E + \diff P)\bm U/\rho - (E + P) \bm U/\rho^2 \diff\rho
211\end{pmatrix},
212\end{aligned}
213$$
214
215where $\diff P$ is defined by differentiating {eq}`eq-state`.
216
217:::{dropdown} Stabilization scale $\bm\tau$
218A velocity vector $\bm u$ can be pulled back to the reference element as $\bm u_{\bm X} = \nabla_{\bm x}\bm X \cdot \bm u$, with units of reference length (non-dimensional) per second.
219To build intuition, consider a boundary layer element of dimension $(1, \epsilon)$, for which $\nabla_{\bm x} \bm X = \bigl(\begin{smallmatrix} 2 & \\ & 2/\epsilon \end{smallmatrix}\bigr)$.
220So a small normal component of velocity will be amplified (by a factor of the aspect ratio $1/\epsilon$) in this transformation.
221The ratio $\lVert \bm u \rVert / \lVert \bm u_{\bm X} \rVert$ is a covariant measure of (half) the element length in the direction of the velocity.
222A contravariant measure of element length in the direction of a unit vector $\hat{\bm n}$ is given by $\lVert \bigl(\nabla_{\bm X} \bm x\bigr)^T \hat{\bm n} \rVert$.
223While $\nabla_{\bm X} \bm x$ is readily computable, its inverse $\nabla_{\bm x} \bm X$ is needed directly in finite element methods and thus more convenient for our use.
224If we consider a parallelogram, the covariant measure is larger than the contravariant measure for vectors pointing between acute corners and the opposite holds for vectors between oblique corners.
225
226The cell Péclet number is classically defined by $\mathrm{Pe}_h = \lVert \bm u \rVert h / (2 \kappa)$ where $\kappa$ is the diffusivity (units of $m^2/s$).
227This can be generalized to arbitrary grids by defining the local Péclet number
228
229$$
230\mathrm{Pe} = \frac{\lVert \bm u \rVert^2}{\lVert \bm u_{\bm X} \rVert \kappa}.
231$$ (eq-peclet)
232
233For scalar advection-diffusion, the stabilization is a scalar
234
235$$
236\tau = \frac{\xi(\mathrm{Pe})}{\lVert \bm u_{\bm X} \rVert},
237$$ (eq-tau-advdiff)
238
239where $\xi(\mathrm{Pe}) = \coth \mathrm{Pe} - 1/\mathrm{Pe}$ approaches 1 at large local Péclet number.
240Note that $\tau$ has units of time and, in the transport-dominated limit, is proportional to element transit time in the direction of the propagating wave.
241For advection-diffusion, $\bm F(q) = \bm u q$, and thus the SU stabilization term is
242
243$$
244\nabla v \cdot \bm u \tau \bm u \cdot \nabla q = \nabla_{\bm X} v \cdot (\bm u_{\bm X} \tau \bm u_{\bm X}) \cdot \nabla_{\bm X} q .
245$$ (eq-su-stabilize-advdiff)
246
247where the term in parentheses is a rank-1 diffusivity tensor that has been pulled back to the reference element.
248See {cite}`hughesetal2010` equations 15-17 and 34-36 for further discussion of this formulation.
249
250For the Navier-Stokes and Euler equations, {cite}`whiting2003hierarchical` defines a $5\times 5$ diagonal stabilization $\mathrm{diag}(\tau_c, \tau_m, \tau_m, \tau_m, \tau_E)$ consisting of
2511. continuity stabilization $\tau_c$
2522. momentum stabilization $\tau_m$
2533. energy stabilization $\tau_E$
254
255The Navier-Stokes code in this example uses the following formulation for $\tau_c$, $\tau_m$, $\tau_E$:
256
257$$
258\begin{aligned}
259
260\tau_c &= \frac{C_c \mathcal{F}}{8\rho \trace(\bm g)} \\
261\tau_m &= \frac{C_m}{\mathcal{F}} \\
262\tau_E &= \frac{C_E}{\mathcal{F} c_v} \\
263\end{aligned}
264$$
265
266$$
267\mathcal{F} = \sqrt{ \rho^2 \left [ \left(\frac{2C_t}{\Delta t}\right)^2
268+ \bm u \cdot (\bm u \cdot  \bm g)
269+ C_v \mu^2 \Vert \bm g \Vert_F ^2\right]}
270$$
271
272where $\bm g = \nabla_{\bm x} \bm{X} \cdot \nabla_{\bm x} \bm{X}$ is the metric tensor and $\Vert \cdot \Vert_F$ is the Frobenius norm.
273This formulation is currently not available in the Euler code.
274
275In the Euler code, we follow {cite}`hughesetal2010` in defining a $3\times 3$ diagonal stabilization according to spatial criterion 2 (equation 27) as follows.
276
277$$
278\tau_{ii} = c_{\tau} \frac{2 \xi(\mathrm{Pe})}{(\lambda_{\max \text{abs}})_i \lVert \nabla_{x_i} \bm X \rVert}
279$$ (eq-tau-conservative)
280
281where $c_{\tau}$ is a multiplicative constant reported to be optimal at 0.5 for linear elements, $\hat{\bm n}_i$ is a unit vector in direction $i$, and $\nabla_{x_i} = \hat{\bm n}_i \cdot \nabla_{\bm x}$ is the derivative in direction $i$.
282The flux Jacobian $\frac{\partial \bm F_{\text{adv}}}{\partial \bm q} \cdot \hat{\bm n}_i$ in each direction $i$ is a $5\times 5$ matrix with spectral radius $(\lambda_{\max \text{abs}})_i$ equal to the fastest wave speed.
283The complete set of eigenvalues of the Euler flux Jacobian in direction $i$ are (e.g., {cite}`toro2009`)
284
285$$
286\Lambda_i = [u_i - a, u_i, u_i, u_i, u_i+a],
287$$ (eq-eigval-advdiff)
288
289where $u_i = \bm u \cdot \hat{\bm n}_i$ is the velocity component in direction $i$ and $a = \sqrt{\gamma P/\rho}$ is the sound speed for ideal gasses.
290Note that the first and last eigenvalues represent nonlinear acoustic waves while the middle three are linearly degenerate, carrying a contact wave (temperature) and transverse components of momentum.
291The fastest wave speed in direction $i$ is thus
292
293$$
294\lambda_{\max \text{abs}} \Bigl( \frac{\partial \bm F_{\text{adv}}}{\partial \bm q} \cdot \hat{\bm n}_i \Bigr) = |u_i| + a
295$$ (eq-wavespeed)
296
297Note that this wave speed is specific to ideal gases as $\gamma$ is an ideal gas parameter; other equations of state will yield a different acoustic wave speed.
298
299:::
300
301Currently, this demo provides three types of problems/physical models that can be selected at run time via the option `-problem`.
302{ref}`problem-advection`, the problem of the transport of energy in a uniform vector velocity field, {ref}`problem-euler-vortex`, the exact solution to the Euler equations, and the so called {ref}`problem-density-current` problem.
303
304(problem-advection)=
305
306## Advection
307
308A simplified version of system {eq}`eq-ns`, only accounting for the transport of total energy, is given by
309
310$$
311\frac{\partial E}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot (\bm{u} E ) = 0 \, ,
312$$ (eq-advection)
313
314with $\bm{u}$ the vector velocity field. In this particular test case, a blob of total energy (defined by a characteristic radius $r_c$) is transported by two different wind types.
315
316- **Rotation**
317
318  In this case, a uniform circular velocity field transports the blob of total energy.
319  We have solved {eq}`eq-advection` applying zero energy density $E$, and no-flux for $\bm{u}$ on the boundaries.
320
321- **Translation**
322
323  In this case, a background wind with a constant rectilinear velocity field, enters the domain and transports the blob of total energy out of the domain.
324
325  For the inflow boundary conditions, a prescribed $E_{wind}$ is applied weakly on the inflow boundaries such that the weak form boundary integral in {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns` is defined as
326
327  $$
328  \int_{\partial \Omega_{inflow}} \bm v \cdot \bm{F}(\bm q_N) \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS = \int_{\partial \Omega_{inflow}} \bm v \, E_{wind} \, \bm u \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS  \, ,
329  $$
330
331  For the outflow boundary conditions, we have used the current values of $E$, following {cite}`papanastasiou1992outflow` which extends the validity of the weak form of the governing equations to the outflow instead of replacing them with unknown essential or natural boundary conditions.
332  The weak form boundary integral in {eq}`eq-weak-vector-ns` for outflow boundary conditions is defined as
333
334  $$
335  \int_{\partial \Omega_{outflow}} \bm v \cdot \bm{F}(\bm q_N) \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS = \int_{\partial \Omega_{outflow}} \bm v \, E \, \bm u \cdot \widehat{\bm{n}} \,dS  \, ,
336  $$
337
338(problem-euler-vortex)=
339
340## Isentropic Vortex
341
342Three-dimensional Euler equations, which are simplified and nondimensionalized version of system {eq}`eq-ns` and account only for the convective fluxes, are given by
343
344$$
345\begin{aligned}
346\frac{\partial \rho}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \bm{U} &= 0 \\
347\frac{\partial \bm{U}}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \left( \frac{\bm{U} \otimes \bm{U}}{\rho} + P \bm{I}_3 \right) &= 0 \\
348\frac{\partial E}{\partial t} + \nabla \cdot \left( \frac{(E + P)\bm{U}}{\rho} \right) &= 0 \, , \\
349\end{aligned}
350$$ (eq-euler)
351
352Following the setup given in {cite}`zhang2011verification`, the mean flow for this problem is $\rho=1$, $P=1$, $T=P/\rho= 1$ (Specific Gas Constant, $R$, is 1), and $\bm{u}=(u_1,u_2,0)$ while the perturbation $\delta \bm{u}$, and $\delta T$ are defined as
353
354$$
355\begin{aligned} (\delta u_1, \, \delta u_2) &= \frac{\epsilon}{2 \pi} \, e^{0.5(1-r^2)} \, (-\bar{y}, \, \bar{x}) \, , \\ \delta T &= - \frac{(\gamma-1) \, \epsilon^2}{8 \, \gamma \, \pi^2} \, e^{1-r^2} \, , \\ \end{aligned}
356$$
357
358where $(\bar{x}, \, \bar{y}) = (x-x_c, \, y-y_c)$, $(x_c, \, y_c)$ represents the center of the domain, $r^2=\bar{x}^2 + \bar{y}^2$, and $\epsilon$ is the vortex strength ($\epsilon$ < 10).
359There is no perturbation in the entropy $S=P/\rho^\gamma$ ($\delta S=0)$.
360
361(problem-shock-tube)=
362
363## Shock Tube
364
365This test problem is based on Sod's Shock Tube (from{cite}`sodshocktubewiki`), a canonical test case for discontinuity capturing in one dimension. For this problem, the three-dimensional Euler equations are formulated exactly as in the Isentropic Vortex problem. The default initial conditions are $P=1$, $\rho=1$ for the driver section and $P=0.1$, $\rho=0.125$ for the driven section. The initial velocity is zero in both sections. Slip boundary conditions are applied to the side walls and wall boundary conditions are applied at the end walls.
366
367SU upwinding and discontinuity capturing have been implemented into the explicit timestepping operator for this problem. Discontinuity capturing is accomplished using a modified version of the $YZ\beta$ operator described in {cite}`tezduyar2007yzb`. This discontinuity capturing scheme involves the introduction of a dissipation term of the form
368
369$$
370\int_{\Omega} \nu_{SHOCK} \nabla \bm v \!:\! \nabla \bm q dV
371$$
372
373The shock capturing viscosity is implemented following the first formulation described in {cite}`tezduyar2007yzb`. The characteristic velocity $u_{cha}$ is taken to be the acoustic speed while the reference density $\rho_{ref}$ is just the local density. Shock capturing viscosity is defined by the following
374
375$$
376\nu_{SHOCK} = \tau_{SHOCK} u_{cha}^2
377$$
378
379where,
380
381$$
382\tau_{SHOCK} = \frac{h_{SHOCK}}{2u_{cha}} \left( \frac{ \,|\, \nabla \rho \,|\, h_{SHOCK}}{\rho_{ref}} \right)^{\beta}
383$$
384
385$\beta$ is a tuning parameter set between 1 (smoother shocks) and 2 (sharper shocks. The parameter $h_{SHOCK}$ is a length scale that is proportional to the element length in the direction of the density gradient unit vector. This density gradient unit vector is defined as $\hat{\bm j} = \frac{\nabla \rho}{|\nabla \rho|}$. The original formulation of Tezduyar and Senga relies on the shape function gradient to define the element length scale, but this gradient is not available to qFunctions in libCEED. To avoid this problem, $h_{SHOCK}$ is defined in the current implementation as
386
387$$
388h_{SHOCK} = 2 \left( C_{YZB} \,|\, \bm p \,|\, \right)^{-1}
389$$
390
391where
392
393$$
394p_k = \hat{j}_i \frac{\partial \xi_i}{x_k}
395$$
396
397The constant $C_{YZB}$ is set to 0.1 for piecewise linear elements in the current implementation. Larger values approaching unity are expected with more robust stabilization and implicit timestepping.
398
399(problem-density-current)=
400
401## Gaussian Wave
402This test case is taken/inspired by that presented in {cite}`mengaldoCompressibleBC2014`. It is intended to test non-reflecting/Riemann boundary conditions. It's primarily intended for Euler equations, but has been implemented for the Navier-Stokes equations here for flexibility.
403
404The problem has a perturbed initial condition and lets it evolve in time. The initial condition contains a Gaussian perturbation in the pressure field:
405
406$$
407\begin{aligned}
408\rho &= \rho_\infty\left(1+A\exp\left(\frac{-(\bar{x}^2 + \bar{y}^2)}{2\sigma^2}\right)\right) \\
409\bm{U} &= \bm U_\infty \\
410E &= \frac{p_\infty}{\gamma -1}\left(1+A\exp\left(\frac{-(\bar{x}^2 + \bar{y}^2)}{2\sigma^2}\right)\right) + \frac{\bm U_\infty \cdot \bm U_\infty}{2\rho_\infty},
411\end{aligned}
412$$
413
414where $A$ and $\sigma$ are the amplitude and width of the perturbation, respectively, and $(\bar{x}, \bar{y}) = (x-x_e, y-y_e)$ is the distance to the epicenter of the perturbation, $(x_e, y_e)$.
415The simulation produces a strong acoustic wave and leaves behind a cold thermal bubble that advects at the fluid velocity.
416
417The boundary conditions are freestream in the x and y directions. When using an HLL (Harten, Lax, van Leer) Riemann solver {cite}`toro2009` (option `-freestream_riemann hll`), the acoustic waves exit the domain cleanly, but when the thermal bubble reaches the boundary, it produces strong thermal oscillations that become acoustic waves reflecting into the domain.
418This problem can be fixed using a more sophisticated Riemann solver such as HLLC {cite}`toro2009` (option `-freestream_riemann hllc`, which is default), which is a linear constant-pressure wave that transports temperature and transverse momentum at the fluid velocity.
419
420## Vortex Shedding - Flow past Cylinder
421This test case, based on {cite}`shakib1991femcfd`, is an example of using an externally provided mesh from Gmsh.
422A cylinder with diameter $D=1$ is centered at $(0,0)$ in a computational domain $-4.5 \leq x \leq 15.5$, $-4.5 \leq y \leq 4.5$.
423We solve this as a 3D problem with (default) one element in the $z$ direction.
424The domain is filled with an ideal gas at rest (zero velocity) with temperature 24.92 and pressure 7143.
425The viscosity is 0.01 and thermal conductivity is 14.34 to maintain a Prandtl number of 0.71, which is typical for air.
426At time $t=0$, this domain is subjected to freestream boundary conditions at the inflow (left) and Riemann-type outflow on the right, with exterior reference state at velocity $(1, 0, 0)$ giving Reynolds number $100$ and Mach number $0.01$.
427A symmetry (adiabatic free slip) condition is imposed at the top and bottom boundaries $(y = \pm 4.5)$ (zero normal velocity component, zero heat-flux).
428The cylinder wall is an adiabatic (no heat flux) no-slip boundary condition.
429As we evolve in time, eddies appear past the cylinder leading to a vortex shedding known as the vortex street, with shedding period of about 6.
430
431The Gmsh input file, `examples/fluids/meshes/cylinder.geo` is parametrized to facilitate experimenting with similar configurations.
432The Strouhal number (nondimensional shedding frequency) is sensitive to the size of the computational domain and boundary conditions.
433
434Forces on the cylinder walls are computed using the "reaction force" method, which is variationally consistent with the volume operator.
435Given the force components $\bm F = (F_x, F_y, F_z)$ and surface area $S = \pi D L_z$ where $L_z$ is the spanwise extent of the domain, we define the coefficients of lift and drag as
436
437$$
438\begin{aligned}
439C_L &= \frac{2 F_y}{\rho_\infty u_\infty^2 S} \\
440C_D &= \frac{2 F_x}{\rho_\infty u_\infty^2 S} \\
441\end{aligned}
442$$
443
444where $\rho_\infty, u_\infty$ are the freestream (inflow) density and velocity respectively.
445
446## Density Current
447
448For this test problem (from {cite}`straka1993numerical`), we solve the full Navier-Stokes equations {eq}`eq-ns`, for which a cold air bubble (of radius $r_c$) drops by convection in a neutrally stratified atmosphere.
449Its initial condition is defined in terms of the Exner pressure, $\pi(\bm{x},t)$, and potential temperature, $\theta(\bm{x},t)$, that relate to the state variables via
450
451$$
452\begin{aligned} \rho &= \frac{P_0}{( c_p - c_v)\theta(\bm{x},t)} \pi(\bm{x},t)^{\frac{c_v}{ c_p - c_v}} \, , \\ e &= c_v \theta(\bm{x},t) \pi(\bm{x},t) + \bm{u}\cdot \bm{u} /2 + g z \, , \end{aligned}
453$$
454
455where $P_0$ is the atmospheric pressure.
456For this problem, we have used no-slip and non-penetration boundary conditions for $\bm{u}$, and no-flux for mass and energy densities.
457
458## Channel
459
460A compressible channel flow. Analytical solution given in
461{cite}`whitingStabilizedFEM1999`:
462
463$$ u_1 = u_{\max} \left [ 1 - \left ( \frac{x_2}{H}\right)^2 \right] \quad \quad u_2 = u_3 = 0$$
464$$T = T_w \left [ 1 + \frac{Pr \hat{E}c}{3} \left \{1 - \left(\frac{x_2}{H}\right)^4  \right \} \right]$$
465$$p = p_0 - \frac{2\rho_0 u_{\max}^2 x_1}{Re_H H}$$
466
467where $H$ is the channel half-height, $u_{\max}$ is the center velocity, $T_w$ is the temperature at the wall, $Pr=\frac{\mu}{c_p \kappa}$ is the Prandlt number, $\hat E_c = \frac{u_{\max}^2}{c_p T_w}$ is the modified Eckert number, and $Re_h = \frac{u_{\max}H}{\nu}$ is the Reynolds number.
468
469Boundary conditions are periodic in the streamwise direction, and no-slip and non-penetration boundary conditions at the walls.
470The flow is driven by a body force determined analytically from the fluid properties and setup parameters $H$ and $u_{\max}$.
471
472## Flat Plate Boundary Layer
473
474### Laminar Boundary Layer - Blasius
475
476Simulation of a laminar boundary layer flow, with the inflow being prescribed
477by a [Blasius similarity
478solution](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blasius_boundary_layer). At the inflow,
479the velocity is prescribed by the Blasius soution profile, density is set
480constant, and temperature is allowed to float. Using `weakT: true`, density is
481allowed to float and temperature is set constant. At the outlet, a user-set
482pressure is used for pressure in the inviscid flux terms (all other inviscid
483flux terms use interior solution values). The wall is a no-slip,
484no-penetration, no-heat flux condition. The top of the domain is treated as an
485outflow and is tilted at a downward angle to ensure that flow is always exiting
486it.
487
488### Turbulent Boundary Layer
489
490Simulating a turbulent boundary layer without modeling the turbulence requires
491resolving the turbulent flow structures. These structures may be introduced
492into the simulations either by allowing a laminar boundary layer naturally
493transition to turbulence, or imposing turbulent structures at the inflow. The
494latter approach has been taken here, specifically using a *synthetic turbulence
495generation* (STG) method.
496
497#### Synthetic Turbulence Generation (STG) Boundary Condition
498
499We use the STG method described in
500{cite}`shurSTG2014`. Below follows a re-description of the formulation to match
501the present notation, and then a description of the implementation and usage.
502
503##### Equation Formulation
504
505$$
506\bm{u}(\bm{x}, t) = \bm{\overline{u}}(\bm{x}) + \bm{C}(\bm{x}) \cdot \bm{v}'
507$$
508
509$$
510\begin{aligned}
511\bm{v}' &= 2 \sqrt{3/2} \sum^N_{n=1} \sqrt{q^n(\bm{x})} \bm{\sigma}^n \cos(\kappa^n \bm{d}^n \cdot \bm{\hat{x}}^n(\bm{x}, t) + \phi^n ) \\
512\bm{\hat{x}}^n &= \left[(x - U_0 t)\max(2\kappa_{\min}/\kappa^n, 0.1) , y, z  \right]^T
513\end{aligned}
514$$
515
516Here, we define the number of wavemodes $N$, set of random numbers $ \{\bm{\sigma}^n,
517\bm{d}^n, \phi^n\}_{n=1}^N$, the Cholesky decomposition of the Reynolds stress
518tensor $\bm{C}$ (such that $\bm{R} = \bm{CC}^T$ ), bulk velocity $U_0$,
519wavemode amplitude $q^n$, wavemode frequency $\kappa^n$, and $\kappa_{\min} =
5200.5 \min_{\bm{x}} (\kappa_e)$.
521
522$$
523\kappa_e = \frac{2\pi}{\min(2d_w, 3.0 l_t)}
524$$
525
526where $l_t$ is the turbulence length scale, and $d_w$ is the distance to the
527nearest wall.
528
529
530The set of wavemode frequencies is defined by a geometric distribution:
531
532$$
533\kappa^n = \kappa_{\min} (1 + \alpha)^{n-1} \ , \quad \forall n=1, 2, ... , N
534$$
535
536The wavemode amplitudes $q^n$ are defined by a model energy spectrum $E(\kappa)$:
537
538$$
539q^n = \frac{E(\kappa^n) \Delta \kappa^n}{\sum^N_{n=1} E(\kappa^n)\Delta \kappa^n} \ ,\quad \Delta \kappa^n = \kappa^n - \kappa^{n-1}
540$$
541
542$$ E(\kappa) = \frac{(\kappa/\kappa_e)^4}{[1 + 2.4(\kappa/\kappa_e)^2]^{17/6}} f_\eta f_{\mathrm{cut}} $$
543
544$$
545f_\eta = \exp \left[-(12\kappa /\kappa_\eta)^2 \right], \quad
546f_\mathrm{cut} = \exp \left( - \left [ \frac{4\max(\kappa-0.9\kappa_\mathrm{cut}, 0)}{\kappa_\mathrm{cut}} \right]^3 \right)
547$$
548
549$\kappa_\eta$ represents turbulent dissipation frequency, and is given as $2\pi
550(\nu^3/\varepsilon)^{-1/4}$ with $\nu$ the kinematic viscosity and
551$\varepsilon$ the turbulent dissipation. $\kappa_\mathrm{cut}$ approximates the
552effective cutoff frequency of the mesh (viewing the mesh as a filter on
553solution over $\Omega$) and is given by:
554
555$$
556\kappa_\mathrm{cut} = \frac{2\pi}{ 2\min\{ [\max(h_y, h_z, 0.3h_{\max}) + 0.1 d_w], h_{\max} \} }
557$$
558
559The enforcement of the boundary condition is identical to the blasius inflow;
560it weakly enforces velocity, with the option of weakly enforcing either density
561or temperature using the the `-weakT` flag.
562
563##### Initialization Data Flow
564
565Data flow for initializing function (which creates the context data struct) is
566given below:
567```{mermaid}
568flowchart LR
569    subgraph STGInflow.dat
570    y
571    lt[l_t]
572    eps
573    Rij[R_ij]
574    ubar
575    end
576
577    subgraph STGRand.dat
578    rand[RN Set];
579    end
580
581    subgraph User Input
582    u0[U0];
583    end
584
585    subgraph init[Create Context Function]
586    ke[k_e]
587    N;
588    end
589    lt --Calc-->ke --Calc-->kn
590    y --Calc-->ke
591
592    subgraph context[Context Data]
593    yC[y]
594    randC[RN Set]
595    Cij[C_ij]
596    u0 --Copy--> u0C[U0]
597    kn[k^n];
598    ubarC[ubar]
599    ltC[l_t]
600    epsC[eps]
601    end
602    ubar --Copy--> ubarC;
603    y --Copy--> yC;
604    lt --Copy--> ltC;
605    eps --Copy--> epsC;
606
607    rand --Copy--> randC;
608    rand --> N --Calc--> kn;
609    Rij --Calc--> Cij[C_ij]
610```
611
612This is done once at runtime. The spatially-varying terms are then evaluated at
613each quadrature point on-the-fly, either by interpolation (for $l_t$,
614$\varepsilon$, $C_{ij}$, and $\overline{\bm u}$) or by calculation (for $q^n$).
615
616The `STGInflow.dat` file is a table of values at given distances from the wall.
617These values are then interpolated to a physical location (node or quadrature
618point). It has the following format:
619```
620[Total number of locations] 14
621[d_w] [u_1] [u_2] [u_3] [R_11] [R_22] [R_33] [R_12] [R_13] [R_23] [sclr_1] [sclr_2] [l_t] [eps]
622```
623where each `[  ]` item is a number in scientific notation (ie. `3.1415E0`), and `sclr_1` and
624`sclr_2` are reserved for turbulence modeling variables. They are not used in
625this example.
626
627The `STGRand.dat` file is the table of the random number set, $\{\bm{\sigma}^n,
628\bm{d}^n, \phi^n\}_{n=1}^N$. It has the format:
629```
630[Number of wavemodes] 7
631[d_1] [d_2] [d_3] [phi] [sigma_1] [sigma_2] [sigma_3]
632```
633
634The following table is presented to help clarify the dimensionality of the
635numerous terms in the STG formulation.
636
637| Math                                           | Label    | $f(\bm{x})$?   | $f(n)$?   |
638| -----------------                              | -------- | -------------- | --------- |
639| $ \{\bm{\sigma}^n, \bm{d}^n, \phi^n\}_{n=1}^N$ | RN Set   | No             | Yes       |
640| $\bm{\overline{u}}$                            | ubar     | Yes            | No        |
641| $U_0$                                          | U0       | No             | No        |
642| $l_t$                                          | l_t      | Yes            | No        |
643| $\varepsilon$                                  | eps      | Yes            | No        |
644| $\bm{R}$                                       | R_ij     | Yes            | No        |
645| $\bm{C}$                                       | C_ij     | Yes            | No        |
646| $q^n$                                          | q^n      | Yes            | Yes       |
647| $\{\kappa^n\}_{n=1}^N$                         | k^n      | No             | Yes       |
648| $h_i$                                          | h_i      | Yes            | No        |
649| $d_w$                                          | d_w      | Yes            | No        |
650
651#### Internal Damping Layer (IDL)
652The STG inflow boundary condition creates large amplitude acoustic waves.
653We use an internal damping layer (IDL) to damp them out without disrupting the synthetic structures developing into natural turbulent structures. This implementation was inspired from
654{cite}`shurSTG2014`, but is implemented here as a ramped volumetric forcing
655term, similar to a sponge layer (see 8.4.2.4 in {cite}`colonius2023turbBC` for example). It takes the following form:
656
657$$
658S(\bm{q}) = -\sigma(\bm{x})\left.\frac{\partial \bm{q}}{\partial \bm{Y}}\right\rvert_{\bm{q}} \bm{Y}'
659$$
660
661where $\bm{Y}' = [P - P_\mathrm{ref}, \bm{0}, 0]^T$, and $\sigma(\bm{x})$ is a
662linear ramp starting at `-idl_start` with length `-idl_length` and an amplitude
663of inverse `-idl_decay_rate`. The damping is defined in terms of a pressure-primitive
664anomaly $\bm Y'$ converted to conservative source using $\partial
665\bm{q}/\partial \bm{Y}\rvert_{\bm{q}}$, which is linearized about the current
666flow state. $P_\mathrm{ref}$ is defined via the `-reference_pressure` flag.
667
668### Meshing
669
670The flat plate boundary layer example has custom meshing features to better
671resolve the flow. One of those is tilting the top of the domain, allowing for
672it to be a outflow boundary condition. The angle of this tilt is controlled by
673`-platemesh_top_angle`
674
675The primary meshing feature is the ability to grade the mesh, providing better
676resolution near the wall. There are two methods to do this; algorithmically, or
677specifying the node locations via a file. Algorithmically, a base node
678distribution is defined at the inlet (assumed to be $\min(x)$) and then
679linearly stretched/squeezed to match the slanted top boundary condition. Nodes
680are placed such that `-platemesh_Ndelta` elements are within
681`-platemesh_refine_height` of the wall. They are placed such that the element
682height matches a geometric growth ratio defined by `-platemesh_growth`. The
683remaining elements are then distributed from `-platemesh_refine_height` to the
684top of the domain linearly in logarithmic space.
685
686Alternatively, a file may be specified containing the locations of each node.
687The file should be newline delimited, with the first line specifying the number
688of points and the rest being the locations of the nodes. The node locations
689used exactly at the inlet (assumed to be $\min(x)$) and linearly
690stretched/squeezed to match the slanted top boundary condition. The file is
691specified via `-platemesh_y_node_locs_path`. If this flag is given an empty
692string, then the algorithmic approach will be performed.
693