Low-Dissipation Advection Schemes Designed for Large Eddy Simulations of Hypersonic Propulsion SystemsThe 2nd-order upwind inviscid flux scheme implemented in the multi-block, structured grid, cell centered, finite volume, high-speed reacting flow code VULCAN has been modified to reduce numerical dissipation. This modification was motivated by the desire to improve the codes ability to perform large eddy simulations. The reduction in dissipation was accomplished through a hybridization of non-dissipative and dissipative discontinuity-capturing advection schemes that reduces numerical dissipation while maintaining the ability to capture shocks. A methodology for constructing hybrid-advection schemes that blends nondissipative fluxes consisting of linear combinations of divergence and product rule forms discretized using 4th-order symmetric operators, with dissipative, 3rd or 4th-order reconstruction based upwind flux schemes was developed and implemented. A series of benchmark problems with increasing spatial and fluid dynamical complexity were utilized to examine the ability of the candidate schemes to resolve and propagate structures typical of turbulent flow, their discontinuity capturing capability and their robustness. A realistic geometry typical of a high-speed propulsion system flowpath was computed using the most promising of the examined schemes and was compared with available experimental data to demonstrate simulation fidelity.
Document ID
20120013269
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
White, Jeffrey A. (NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Baurle, Robert A. (NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Fisher, Travis C. (NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Quinlan, Jesse R. (Virginia Univ. Charlottesville, VA, United States)
Black, William S. (Purdue Univ. West Lafayette, IN, United States)