A Numerical Study of Mesh Adaptivity in Multiphase Flows with Non-Newtonian Fluids

ORAL

Abstract

We present an investigation into the computational efficiency benefits of dynamic mesh adaptivity in the numerical simulation of transient multiphase fluid flow problems involving Non-Newtonian fluids. Such fluids appear in a range of industrial applications, from printing inks to toothpastes and introduce new challenges for mesh adaptivity due to the additional ``memory'' of viscoelastic fluids. Nevertheless, the multiscale nature of these flows implies huge potential benefits for a successful implementation. The study is performed using the open source package Fluidity, which couples an unstructured mesh control volume finite element solver for the multiphase Navier-Stokes equations to a dynamic anisotropic mesh adaptivity algorithm, based on estimated solution interpolation error criteria, and conservative mesh-to-mesh interpolation routine. The code is applied to problems involving rheologies ranging from simple Newtonian to shear-thinning to viscoelastic materials and verified against experimental data for various industrial and microfluidic flows.

*This work was undertaken as part of the EPSRC MEMPHIS programme grant EP/K003976/1.

Authors

  • James Percival

    • Imperial College London
    • Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London
  • Dimitrios Pavlidis

    • Imperial College London
  • Zhihua Xie

    • Imperial College London
  • Federico Alberini

    • University of Birmingham
  • Mark Simmons

    • University of Birmingham
  • Christopher Pain

    • Imperial College London
  • Omar Matar

    • Imperial College London