Abstract

The Navier-Stokes-Korteweg (NSK) system is a classical diffuse interface model which is based on van der Waals' theory of capillarity. Diffuse interface methods have gained much interest to model two-phase flow in porous media. However, for the numerical solution of the NSK equations two major challenges have to be faced. First, an extended numerical stencil is required due to a third-order term in the linear momentum and the total energy equations. In addition, the dispersive contribution in the linear momentum equations prevents the straightforward use of contact angle boundary conditions. Secondly, any real gas equation of state is based on a non-convex Helmholtz free energy potential which may cause the eigenvalues of the Jacobian of the first-order fluxes to become imaginary numbers inside the spinodal region.In this work, a thermodynamically consistent relaxation model is presented which is used to approximate the NSK equations. The model is complimented by thermodynamically consistent non-equilibrium boundary conditions which take contact angle effects into account. Due to the relaxation approach, the contribution of the Korteweg tensor in the linear momentum and total energy equations can be reduced to first-order terms which enables a straightforward implementation of contact angle boundary conditions in a numerical scheme. Moreover, the definition of a modified pressure function enables to formulate first-order fluxes which remain strictly hyperbolic in the entire spinodal region. The present work is a generalization of a previously presented parabolic relaxation model for the isothermal NSK equations.A high-order discontinuous Galerkin spectral element method which supports curved elements and hanging nodes is employed to discretize the system. The relaxation model and its corresponding boundary conditions are validated using solutions of the original NSK model and analytical results for one-, two- and three-dimensional test cases. The simulation of a spinodal decomposition in a three-dimensional porous structure underlines the capability of the presented approach.

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