A front-tracking immersed-boundary framework for simulating Lagrangian melting problems

Kevin Zhong*, Christopher J. Howland, Detlef Lohse, Roberto Verzicco

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

In so-called Lagrangian melting problems, a solid immersed in a fluid medium is free to rotate and translate in tandem with its phase-change from solid to liquid. Such configurations may be classified as a fluid-solid interaction (FSI) problem coupled to phase-change. Our present work proposes a numerical method capable of simulating these Lagrangian melting problems and adopts a front-tracking immersed-boundary (IB) method. We use the moving least squares IB framework, a well-established method for simulating a diverse range of FSI problems [1,2] and extend this framework to accommodate melting by additionally imposing the Stefan condition at the interface. In the spirit of canonical front-tracking methods, the immersed solid is represented by a discrete triangulated mesh which is separate from the Eulerian mesh in which the governing flow equations are solved. A known requirement for these methods is the need for comparable Eulerian and Lagrangian grid spacings to stabilise interpolation and spreading operations between the two grids. For a melting object, this requirement is inevitably violated unless interventional remeshing is introduced. Our work therefore presents a novel dynamic remeshing procedure to overcome this. The remeshing is based on a gradual coarsening of the triangulated Lagrangian mesh and amounts to a negligible computational burden per timestep owing to the incremental and local nature of its operations, making it a scalable approach. Moreover, the coarsening is coupled to a volume-conserving smoothing procedure detailed by Kuprat et al. [3], ensuring a zero net volume change in the remeshing step to machine precision. This added feature makes our present method highly specialised to the study of melting problems, where precise measurements of the melting solid's volume is often the primary predictive quantity of interest.

Original languageEnglish
Article number113762
JournalJournal of computational physics
Volume525
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2025

Keywords

  • UT-Hybrid-D
  • Fluid-solid interaction
  • Heat transfer
  • Immersed boundary method
  • Meshing
  • Multiphase flow
  • One-fluid model
  • Phase change
  • Stefan problems
  • Turbulent flows
  • Eulerian–Lagrangian

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