Abstract

Adaptive time stepping methods for metastable dynamics of the Allen–Cahn and Cahn–Hilliard equations are investigated in the spatially continuous, semi-discrete setting. We analyse the performance of a number of first and second order methods, formally predicting step sizes required to satisfy specified local truncation error sigma in the limit of small length scale parameter epsilon rightarrow 0 during meta-stable dynamics. The formal predictions are made under stability assumptions that include the preservation of the asymptotic structure of the diffuse interface, a concept we call profile fidelity. In this setting, definite statements about the relative behaviour of time stepping methods can be made. Some methods, including all so-called energy stable methods but also some fully implicit methods, require asymptotically more time steps than others. The formal analysis is confirmed in computational studies. We observe that some provably energy stable methods popular in the literature perform worse than some more standard schemes. We show further that when Backward Euler is applied to meta-stable Allen–Cahn dynamics, the energy decay and profile fidelity properties for these discretizations are preserved for much larger time steps than previous analysis would suggest. The results are established asymptotically for general interfaces, with a rigorous proof for radial interfaces. It is shown analytically and computationally that for most reaction terms, Eyre type time stepping performs asymptotically worse due to loss of profile fidelity.

Highlights

  • The mathematical literature for computational methods for Allen–Cahn (AC) dynamics [2], and its higher order relative Cahn–Hilliard (CH) dynamics [6], is dominated by the proposal, use, and analysis of so-called energy stable schemes [12,25,26,29]

  • When the dynamics are in this metastable regime, which dominates the time of typical phenomena of interest, definite statements about the behaviour of different time stepping methods can be made

  • We have identified the time step scaling for several first and second order schemes for AC and CH under the restriction of fixed local truncation error, σ

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Summary

Introduction

The mathematical literature for computational methods for Allen–Cahn (AC) dynamics [2], and its higher order relative Cahn–Hilliard (CH) dynamics [6], is dominated by the proposal, use, and analysis of so-called energy stable schemes [12,25,26,29]. Energy stable schemes guarantee that decrease no matter what time step is chosen This is a desirable property not shared by standard fully implicit, semi-implicit (IMEX), or exponential integrator time stepping methods. We show that in the metastable dynamic regime of AC and CH, some fully implicit methods can take optimally sized time steps. When the dynamics are in this metastable regime, which dominates the time of typical phenomena of interest, definite statements about the behaviour of different time stepping methods can be made. This criteria does not take into account solver efficiency. We can make definite statements on how efficient solvers for nonlinear implicit time stepping need to be to outperform other methods

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