Abstract

This paper introduces a novel method for the efficient and accurate computation of volume fractions on unstructured polyhedral meshes, where the phase boundary is an orientable hypersurface, implicitly given as the iso-contour of a sufficiently smooth level-set function. Locally, i.e. in each mesh cell, we compute a principal coordinate system in which the hypersurface can be approximated as the graph of an osculating paraboloid. A recursive application of the Gaussian divergence theorem then allows to analytically transform the volume integrals into curve integrals associated to the polyhedron faces, which can be easily approximated numerically by means of standard Gauss-Legendre quadrature. This face-based formulation enables the applicability to unstructured meshes and considerably simplifies the numerical procedure for applications in three spatial dimensions. We discuss the theoretical foundations and provide details of the numerical algorithm. Finally, we present numerical results for convex and non-convex hypersurfaces embedded in cuboidal and tetrahedral meshes, showing both high accuracy and third- to fourth-order convergence with spatial resolution. The proposed algorithm outperforms existing methods in terms of both accuracy and execution time.

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