
Advancements to the adaptive wavelet-collocation method over the last decade have opened up a number of new possible areas for active research. Volume penalization techniques allow complex immersed boundary conditions to be used with high efficiency for both internal and external flows. Anisotropic methods make it possible to use body-fitted meshes while still taking advantage of the dynamic adaptability properties wavelet-based methods provide. The parallelization of the approach has made it possible to perform large high-resolution simulations of detonation initiation and fluid instabilities to uncover new physical insights that would otherwise be difficult to discover. Other developments include space-time adaptive methods and nonreflecting boundary conditions. This article summarizes the work performed using the adaptive wavelet-collocation method developed by Vasilyev and coworkers over the past decade.
fluid instabilities, QC120-168.85, turbulence modeling, Descriptive and experimental mechanics, parallel algorithm, wavelet-collocation, Thermodynamics, volume penalization, computational fluid dynamics, QC310.15-319
fluid instabilities, QC120-168.85, turbulence modeling, Descriptive and experimental mechanics, parallel algorithm, wavelet-collocation, Thermodynamics, volume penalization, computational fluid dynamics, QC310.15-319
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