TY - JOUR
T1 - Hybrid LBM-FVM solver for two-phase flow simulation
AU - Ma, Yihui
AU - Xiao, Xiaoyu
AU - Li, Wei
AU - Desbrun, Mathieu
AU - Liu, Xiaopei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2024/6/1
Y1 - 2024/6/1
N2 - In this paper, we introduce a hybrid LBM-FVM solver for two-phase fluid flow simulations in which interface dynamics is modeled by a conservative phase-field equation. Integrating fluid equations over time is achieved through a velocity-based lattice Boltzmann solver which is improved by a central-moment multiple-relaxation-time collision model to reach higher accuracy. For interface evolution, we propose a finite-volume-based numerical treatment for the integration of the phase-field equation: we show that the second-order isotropic centered stencils for diffusive and separation fluxes combined with the WENO-5 stencils for advective fluxes achieve similar and sometimes even higher accuracy than the state-of-the-art double-distribution-function LBM methods as well as the DUGKS-based method, while requiring less computations and a smaller amount of memory. Benchmark tests (such as the 2D diagonal translation of a circular interface), along with quantitative evaluations on more complex tests (such as the rising bubble and Rayleigh-Taylor instability simulations) allowing comparisons with prior numerical methods and/or experimental data, are presented to validate the advantage of our hybrid solver. Moreover, 3D simulations (including a dam break simulation) are also compared to the time-lapse photography of physical experiments in order to allow for more qualitative evaluations.
AB - In this paper, we introduce a hybrid LBM-FVM solver for two-phase fluid flow simulations in which interface dynamics is modeled by a conservative phase-field equation. Integrating fluid equations over time is achieved through a velocity-based lattice Boltzmann solver which is improved by a central-moment multiple-relaxation-time collision model to reach higher accuracy. For interface evolution, we propose a finite-volume-based numerical treatment for the integration of the phase-field equation: we show that the second-order isotropic centered stencils for diffusive and separation fluxes combined with the WENO-5 stencils for advective fluxes achieve similar and sometimes even higher accuracy than the state-of-the-art double-distribution-function LBM methods as well as the DUGKS-based method, while requiring less computations and a smaller amount of memory. Benchmark tests (such as the 2D diagonal translation of a circular interface), along with quantitative evaluations on more complex tests (such as the rising bubble and Rayleigh-Taylor instability simulations) allowing comparisons with prior numerical methods and/or experimental data, are presented to validate the advantage of our hybrid solver. Moreover, 3D simulations (including a dam break simulation) are also compared to the time-lapse photography of physical experiments in order to allow for more qualitative evaluations.
KW - Finite-volume method
KW - Lattice Boltzmann method
KW - Two-phase flow simulation
U2 - 10.1016/j.jcp.2024.112920
DO - 10.1016/j.jcp.2024.112920
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85188518371
SN - 0021-9991
VL - 506
JO - Journal of Computational Physics
JF - Journal of Computational Physics
M1 - 112920
ER -