Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes

We present a method for anisotropic mesh refinement to high-order numerical solutions. We accomplish this by assigning metrics to vertices that approximate the error in that region. To choose values for each metric, we first reconstruct an error equation from the leading order terms of the Taylor ex...

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Main Author: Pagnutti, Douglas
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
CFD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/415
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-4152018-01-05T17:22:34Z Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes Pagnutti, Douglas Anisotropic Adaptation High Order CFD Anisotropic Meshing We present a method for anisotropic mesh refinement to high-order numerical solutions. We accomplish this by assigning metrics to vertices that approximate the error in that region. To choose values for each metric, we first reconstruct an error equation from the leading order terms of the Taylor expansion. Then, we use a Fourier approximation to choose the metric associated with that vertex. After assigning a metric to each vertex, we refine the mesh anisotropically using three mesh operations. The three mesh operations we use are swapping to maximize quality, inserting at approximate circumcenters to decrease cell size, and vertex removal to eliminate small edges. Because there are no guarantees on the results of these modification tools, we use them iteratively to produce a quasi-optimal mesh. We present examples demonstrating that our anisotropic refinement algorithm improves solution accuracy for both second and third order solutions compared with uniform refinement and isotropic refinement. We also analyze the effect of using second derivatives for refining third order solutions. Applied Science, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Department of Graduate 2008-02-21T17:14:31Z 2008-02-21T17:14:31Z 2008 2008-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/415 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 2325891 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Anisotropic Adaptation
High Order
CFD
Anisotropic Meshing
spellingShingle Anisotropic Adaptation
High Order
CFD
Anisotropic Meshing
Pagnutti, Douglas
Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
description We present a method for anisotropic mesh refinement to high-order numerical solutions. We accomplish this by assigning metrics to vertices that approximate the error in that region. To choose values for each metric, we first reconstruct an error equation from the leading order terms of the Taylor expansion. Then, we use a Fourier approximation to choose the metric associated with that vertex. After assigning a metric to each vertex, we refine the mesh anisotropically using three mesh operations. The three mesh operations we use are swapping to maximize quality, inserting at approximate circumcenters to decrease cell size, and vertex removal to eliminate small edges. Because there are no guarantees on the results of these modification tools, we use them iteratively to produce a quasi-optimal mesh. We present examples demonstrating that our anisotropic refinement algorithm improves solution accuracy for both second and third order solutions compared with uniform refinement and isotropic refinement. We also analyze the effect of using second derivatives for refining third order solutions. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Mechanical Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Pagnutti, Douglas
author_facet Pagnutti, Douglas
author_sort Pagnutti, Douglas
title Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
title_short Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
title_full Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
title_fullStr Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
title_full_unstemmed Anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
title_sort anisotropic adaptation: metrics and meshes
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/415
work_keys_str_mv AT pagnuttidouglas anisotropicadaptationmetricsandmeshes
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