English

Simulating interfacial flows: a farewell to planes

Computational Physics 2024-01-29 v1 Fluid Dynamics

Abstract

Over the past decades, the volume-of-fluid (VOF) method has been the method of choice for simulating atomization processes, owing to its unique ability to discretely conserve mass. Current state-of-the-art VOF methods, however, rely on the piecewise-linear interface calculation (PLIC) to represent the interface used when calculating advection fluxes. This renders the estimated curvature of the transported interface zeroth-order accurate at best, adversely impacting the simulation of surface-tension-driven flows. In the past few years, there have been several attempts at using piecewise-parabolic interface approximations instead of piecewise-linear ones for computing advection fluxes, albeit all limited to two-dimensional cases or not inherently mass conservative. In this contribution, we present our most recent work on three-dimensional piecewise-parabolic interface reconstruction and apply it in the context of the VOF method. As a result of increasing the order of the interface representation, the reconstruction of the interface and the estimation of its curvature now become a single step instead of two separate ones. The performance of this new approach is assessed both in terms of accuracy and stability and compared to the classical PLIC-VOF approach on a range of canonical test-cases and cases of surface-tension-driven instabilities.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2401.15012,
  title  = {Simulating interfacial flows: a farewell to planes},
  author = {Fabien Evrard and Robert Chiodi and Berend van Wachem and Olivier Desjardins},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2401.15012},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T14:28:23.123Z