On the use of divergence balanced H(div)-L2 pair of approximation spaces for divergence-free and robust simulations of Stokes, coupled Stokes–Darcy and Brinkman problems

Mathematics and Computers in Simulation(2020)

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Abstract
The performance of different classic or more recent finite element formulations for Stokes, coupled Stokes–Darcy and Brinkman problems is discussed. Discontinuous, H1-conforming, or H(div)-conforming velocity approximations can be used for Stokes flows, the formulations being presented in a unified framework. Special emphasis is given to the former H(div)-conforming formulation, for which only the tangential velocity components require a penalization treatment. For incompressible fluids, this method naturally gives exact divergence-free velocity fields, a property that few schemes can achieve. When combined with classic mixed formulation for Darcy’s flows, a strongly conservative scheme is derived for the treatment of coupled Stokes–Darcy problems. Unlike other methods existing in the literature, this technique can use the same combination of approximation spaces in both flow regions, and simplifies the enforcement of the coupling Stokes–Darcy interface conditions. Typical test problems are simulated to illustrate the properties of the different approximations, verifying errors, rates of convergence, and divergence-free realization. Then, an application to the simulation of a model representing self-compacting concrete flow around reinforcing bars is presented. A homogenization technique is applied to interpret the reinforced bar domain by a Darcy’s law, while a Stokes flow is considered in the remaining domain. The methods are also applied to a Brinkman problem, involving physical phenomena ranging from Stokes to Darcy physical limit regimes, to illustrate the robustness of the H(div)-conforming formulation to treat all these scenarios. All the methods are implemented using an object-oriented computational environment.
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Key words
Mixed finite elements methods,Discontinuous Galerkin,Stokes flow,Coupled Stokes–Darcy flow,Divergence-free simulation
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