Abstract

State redistribution (SRD) is a recently developed technique for stabilizing cut cells that result from finite-volume embedded boundary methods. SRD has been successfully applied to a variety of compressible and incompressible flow problems. When used in conjunction with adaptive mesh refinement (AMR), additional steps are needed to preserve the accuracy and conservation properties of the solution if the embedded boundary is not restricted to a single level of the mesh hierarchy. In this work, we extend the weighted state redistribution algorithm to cases where cut cells live at or near a coarse-fine interface within the domain. We present numerical results that demonstrate that the algorithm is conservative when the coarse-fine interface intersects the embedded boundary. Additionally we compare the numerical solution of the Sod shock tube problem in an inclined cylinder with the analytic solution, and we compare the simulation of a shock hitting a cylindrical obstacle with experimental data. Finally we demonstrate the methodology for simulation of the multicomponent compressible Navier-Stokes equations in a piston-bowl geometry, and discuss the computational efficiency gained by not requiring the entire embedded boundary to be defined at the finest level.

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