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Prediction of the moments in advection-diffusion lattice Boltzmann method. I. Truncation dispersion, skewness, and kurtosis
- Source :
- Physical Review E, Physical Review E, American Physical Society (APS), 2017, 95 (1), pp.34. ⟨10.1103/PhysRevE.95.013304⟩
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- HAL CCSD, 2017.
-
Abstract
- International audience; The effect of the heterogeneity in the soil structure or the nonuniformity of the velocity field on the modeled resident time distribution (RTD) and breakthrough curves is quantified by their moments. While the first moment provides the effective velocity, the second moment is related to the longitudinal dispersion coefficient ( k T )in the developed Taylor regime; the third and fourth moments are characterized by their normalized values skewness (Sk) and kurtosis (Ku), respectively. The purpose of this investigation is to examine the role of the truncation corrections of the numerical scheme in k T, Sk, and Ku because of their interference with the second moment, in the form of the numerical dispersion, and in the higher-order moments, by their definition. Our symbolic procedure is based on the recently proposed extended method of moments (EMM). Originally, the EMM restores any-order physical mo- ments of the RTD or averaged distributions assuming that the solute concentration obeys the advection-diffusion equation in multidimensional steady-state velocity field, in streamwise-periodic heterogeneous structure. In our work, the EMM is generalized to the fourth-order-accurate apparent mass-conservation equation in two- and three-dimensional duct flows. The method looks for the solution of the transport equation as the product of a long harmonic wave and a spatially periodic oscillating component; the moments of the given numerical scheme are derived from a chain of the steady-state fourth-order equations at a single cell. This mathematical technique is exemplified for the truncation terms of the two-relaxation-time lattice Boltzmann scheme, using plug and parabolic flow in straight channel and cylindrical capillary with the d2Q9 and d3Q15 discrete velocity sets as simple but illustrative examples. The derived symbolic dependencies can be readily extended for advection by another, Newtonian or non-Newtonian, flow profile in any-shape open-tabular conduits. It is established that the truncation errors in the three transport coefficients k T , Sk, and Ku decay with the second-order accuracy. While the physical values of the three transport coefficients are set by Peclet number, their truncation corrections additionally depend on the two adjustable relaxation rates and the two adjustable equilibrium weight families which independently determine the convective and diffusion discretization stencils. We identify flow- and dimension-independent optimal strategies for adjustable parameters and confront them to stability requirements. Through specific choices of two relaxation rates and weights, we expect our results be directly applicable to forward-time central differences and leap-frog central-convective Du Fort-Frankel-diffusion schemes. In straight channel, a quasi-exact validation of the truncation predictions through the numerical moments becomes possible thanks to the specular-forward no-flux boundary rule. In the staircase description of a cylindrical capillary, we account for the spurious boundary- layer diffusion and dispersion because of the tangential constraint of the bounce-back no-flux boundary rule.
- Subjects :
- Physics
Mathematical optimization
Discretization
Advection
LATTICE BOLTZMANN
Mathematical analysis
Lattice Boltzmann methods
Second moment of area
01 natural sciences
Shape parameter
010305 fluids & plasmas
Skewness
0103 physical sciences
[SDE]Environmental Sciences
Kurtosis
010306 general physics
Convection–diffusion equation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 24700045 and 24700053
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Physical Review E, Physical Review E, American Physical Society (APS), 2017, 95 (1), pp.34. ⟨10.1103/PhysRevE.95.013304⟩
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a693a8dfa0045c50c4e18e2e83345da0