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Volume 17, Issue 3
Assessment of Heat Flux Prediction Capabilities of Residual Distribution Method: Application to Atmospheric Entry Problems

Jesús Garicano Mena, Raffaele Pepe, Andrea Lani & Herman Deconinck

Commun. Comput. Phys., 17 (2015), pp. 682-702.

Published online: 2018-04

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In the present contribution we evaluate the heat flux prediction capabilities of second-order accurate Residual Distribution (RD ) methods in the context of atmospheric (re-)entry problems around blunt bodies. Our departing point is the computation of subsonic air flows (with air modeled either as an inert ideal gas or as chemically reacting and possibly out of thermal equilibrium gas mixture) around probe-like geometries, as those typically employed into high enthalpy wind tunnels. We confirm the agreement between the solutions obtained with the RD method and the solutions computed with other Finite Volume (FV ) based codes.
However, a straightforward application of the same numerical technique to hypersonic cases involving strong shocks exhibits severe deficiencies even on a geometry as simple as a 2D cylinder. In an attempt to mitigate this problem, we derive new variants of RD schemes. A comparison of these alternative strategies against established ones allows us to derive a diagnose for the shortcomings observed in the traditional RD schemes.

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@Article{CiCP-17-682, author = {Garicano Mena , JesúsPepe , RaffaeleLani , Andrea and Deconinck , Herman}, title = {Assessment of Heat Flux Prediction Capabilities of Residual Distribution Method: Application to Atmospheric Entry Problems}, journal = {Communications in Computational Physics}, year = {2018}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {682--702}, abstract = {

In the present contribution we evaluate the heat flux prediction capabilities of second-order accurate Residual Distribution (RD ) methods in the context of atmospheric (re-)entry problems around blunt bodies. Our departing point is the computation of subsonic air flows (with air modeled either as an inert ideal gas or as chemically reacting and possibly out of thermal equilibrium gas mixture) around probe-like geometries, as those typically employed into high enthalpy wind tunnels. We confirm the agreement between the solutions obtained with the RD method and the solutions computed with other Finite Volume (FV ) based codes.
However, a straightforward application of the same numerical technique to hypersonic cases involving strong shocks exhibits severe deficiencies even on a geometry as simple as a 2D cylinder. In an attempt to mitigate this problem, we derive new variants of RD schemes. A comparison of these alternative strategies against established ones allows us to derive a diagnose for the shortcomings observed in the traditional RD schemes.

}, issn = {1991-7120}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.4208/cicp.070414.211114a}, url = {http://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/cicp/10973.html} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Assessment of Heat Flux Prediction Capabilities of Residual Distribution Method: Application to Atmospheric Entry Problems AU - Garicano Mena , Jesús AU - Pepe , Raffaele AU - Lani , Andrea AU - Deconinck , Herman JO - Communications in Computational Physics VL - 3 SP - 682 EP - 702 PY - 2018 DA - 2018/04 SN - 17 DO - http://doi.org/10.4208/cicp.070414.211114a UR - https://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/cicp/10973.html KW - AB -

In the present contribution we evaluate the heat flux prediction capabilities of second-order accurate Residual Distribution (RD ) methods in the context of atmospheric (re-)entry problems around blunt bodies. Our departing point is the computation of subsonic air flows (with air modeled either as an inert ideal gas or as chemically reacting and possibly out of thermal equilibrium gas mixture) around probe-like geometries, as those typically employed into high enthalpy wind tunnels. We confirm the agreement between the solutions obtained with the RD method and the solutions computed with other Finite Volume (FV ) based codes.
However, a straightforward application of the same numerical technique to hypersonic cases involving strong shocks exhibits severe deficiencies even on a geometry as simple as a 2D cylinder. In an attempt to mitigate this problem, we derive new variants of RD schemes. A comparison of these alternative strategies against established ones allows us to derive a diagnose for the shortcomings observed in the traditional RD schemes.

Jesús Garicano Mena, Raffaele Pepe, Andrea Lani & Herman Deconinck. (2020). Assessment of Heat Flux Prediction Capabilities of Residual Distribution Method: Application to Atmospheric Entry Problems. Communications in Computational Physics. 17 (3). 682-702. doi:10.4208/cicp.070414.211114a
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