MAE Department - PG Seminar - THINC: a practical general-purpose reconstruction scheme for CFD

10:00am - 11:00am
RM 1103, HKUST (1/F, Lift # 19)

Reconstructions are needed in building up numerical schemes for computational fluid dynamics. Different reconstruction functions have their strength and weakness for a given profile.

This presentation focuses on a Sigmoid function with single-degree freedom. The reconstruction, so-called THINC (Tangent of Hyperbola for INterface Capturing) scheme, employs the hyperbolic tangent function to fit initially the jump-like profile, which is commonly observed in the solutions of the interface between multi-phase flows, the contact discontinuity and the shock wave in compressible fluid. As the discontinuous solution is well close to a hyperbolic function with a sharp transition layer, a THINC reconstruction resembles a jump-like solution perfectly. Recalling that THINC function also retrieves a quasi-piece-wise constant when a very flatten transit layer is reconstructed, the THINC reconstruction can be used as a general-purpose reconstruction building block in CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics).

The multi-dimensional THINC function allows the transitional layer to be a polynomial higher than quadratic order, varieties and more difficult reconstructions can be built in structured and unstructured meshes, so as to make the THINC method be even more competitive in capturing spatial complexity. The THINC scheme plays a versatile rule in the CFD. Some examples will be shown in the presentation.

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Prof. Feng XIAO
Professor in the department of mechanical engineering at Tokyo Institute of Technology
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Dr. Xiao is a professor in the department of mechanical engineering at Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech). He is currently engaged in researches on computational fluid dynamics and data/numerical-model integrated analysis, he has authored or co-authored over 160 papers in academic journals. He is a fellow of Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers (JSME), a recipient of JSME Computational Mechanics Achievement Award, JACM Computational Mechanics Award, JACM Fellow Award and others. Prof. Xiao is currently serving the executive editor of Journal of Computational Physics (JCP).

Language
English
Recommended For
Faculty and staff
PG students
Organizer
Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering
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