화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Multiphase Flow, Vol.81, 104-112, 2016
Ransom test results from various two-fluid schemes: Is enforcing hyperbolicity a thermodynamically consistent option?
The basic elliptic ill-posedness of physical models and numerical schemes for two-fluid flows is a recurring issue that has motivated the introduction of numerous possible correction strategies. In practical applications physical terms are generally present and regularize the models (viscosity, drag, surface tension, etc.). Yet, many numerical schemes were developed with the stringent and self-imposed constraint that the convective part of the models to be solved had to be hyperbolic, regardless of the type and magnitude of the particular physical regularizing terms. This leads to consider the simplest possible two-fluid "backbone" models corrected with the simplest "universal" terms to ensure hyperbolicity. Among the proposed corrections is the introduction of an interfacial pressure, either closed by algebraic relations or by supplementary evolution equations. Concurrently with the shift to hyperbolic behavior, these techniques also affect other features of systems: Kelvin-Helmholtz type instabilities are notably quenched at all scales, a highly undesirable effect in many practical situations. Less commonly recognized are also distortions in the transfers between kinetic, reversible, and irreversible energies, sometimes up to thermodynamic inconsistency. The present work aims at comparing on the standard Ransom-faucet test the results from various available hyperbolic and elliptic schemes and models against an explicit double Lagrange-plus-remap discretization of the basic elliptic, one-pressure, compressible, six-equations system (i.e. with energy equations). Four features are examined on this test: the entropy preservation, the stretched stream profile, the volume fraction discontinuity, and the unstable character of the analytical solution for the simplest backbone model. The paper highlights the fact that the convective part of two-fluid models might not be necessarily hyperbolic provided that it is physically consistent and numerically robust. Observation of published results for Ransom's test shows that by enforcing hyperbolicity regardless of thermodynamical consistency, numerical models remove instabilities at the volume fraction discontinuity, but at the expense of distorted profiles of the stretched stream due to excessive numerical diffusion and to spurious forces in the momentum equation. The present approach provides a form of neutral starting point before including dissipative terms: robust but not excessively diffusive, with accurate capture of the stretched stream and volume fraction discontinuity for any practical mesh refinement. Moreover, and consistently with the chosen elliptic model, this numerical scheme eventually generates the elliptic instabilities for late times or fine meshes (but remains robust under the appropriate time step restrictions). It can be supplemented by any kind of small-scale regularization term in order to introduce a cut-off under which physical or numerical stability may be necessary. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.