INVESTIGADORES
NIGRO Norberto Marcelo
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
El metodo pseudo-DNS como una forma natural de estabilizar ecuaciones de advección-difusión-reaccion no estacionarias
Autor/es:
NIGRO NORBERTO; MORIN PEDRO; GIMENEZ JUAN; IDELSOHN, SERGIO
Lugar:
Resistencia, Chaco
Reunión:
Congreso; MECOM 2021; 2021
Institución organizadora:
AMCA
Resumen:
It is well known he usefulness of solving problems numerically from well posedmathematical models. However some features should be warranted, like stability, consistency,conservativity, precision and, if possible, working as much efficiently as posible. Many of the-se problems arise as advective, diffusive, reactive systems in both steady and transient states.Due to the known drawbacks in solving these problems, many proposals to stabilize them ha-ve arisen, most losing something in the order of accuracy, for which a linear scalar version ofthe problem has been developed for such a challenge. Most of them need parameters that arenormally ad-hoc chosen inspired by a mix of physics, mathematics and empirism. In this workwe propose to apply the pseudo DNS method, a multiscale technique developed in our grouppreviously for incompressible turbulent flows, and now applied to physically stable systems,like unsteady advection, diffusion and reaction, in order to maintain the second order of preci-sion both in the space as in time in a numerically stabilized way. After having achieved a verypromising result in the steady 1D case where numerically exact solutions can be achieved andafter having started the extension process to the steady 2D / 3D case with encouraging results,in this work we intend to reinforce what was obtained for the 1D case , but now in an unsteadycondition with solutions that converge to second order in a stable parameter-free form, simplyby appealing to solutions solved previously (for example off-line) for the scales not represen-ted in the discretization. In addition to having good stabilization and precision properties, goodefficiency is added. Will this be the way to close a line of research in which humanity has beeninvolved for a long time with a simple, precise, robust and inexpensive way? Although a positi-ve answer to this question cannot be affirmed, the results that are presented augur some hope ofachieving it