A Study of Additive Linear Multistep Methods for Solving Advection-Diffusion-Reaction Equations
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ali Mara’Beh, RaedEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Departamento
Universidad de Granada. Programa de Doctorado en MatemáticasFecha
2024Fecha lectura
2024-05-27Referencia bibliográfica
Ali Mara’Beh, Raed. A Study of Additive Linear Multistep Methods for Solving Advection-Diffusion-Reaction Equations. Granada: Universidad de Granada, 2024. [https://hdl.handle.net/10481/92973]
Patrocinador
Tesis Univ. Granada.Resumen
This thesis investigates the efficacy of advanced numerical methods for solving advectiondiffusion-
reaction (ADR) problems, essential for describing transport mechanisms in fluid or
solid mediums. It encompasses a detailed study of variable stepsize, semi-implicit, backward
differentiation formula (VSSBDF) methods up to fourth order and introduces novel 3-additive
linear multistep methods, emphasizing the treatment of ADR models that are typically formulated
as partial differential equations. By discretizing these into systems of ordinary
differential equations for numerical analysis, this work addresses the challenges posed by stiff
terms in ADR models.
The first part of the thesis investigates the performance of VSSBDF methods of up to
fourth order for solving ADR models employing two different implicit-explicit (IMEX) splitting
approaches: a physics-based splitting and a splitting based on a dynamic linearization
of the resulting system of ODEs , which is referred to as Jacobian splitting. We develop an
adaptive time-stepping and error control algorithm for VSSBDF methods up to fourth order
based on a step-doubling refinement technique using estimates of the local truncation errors.
Through a systematic comparison between physics-based and Jacobian splitting across
seven ADR test models, we evaluate the performance based on CPU times and corresponding
accuracy. Our findings demonstrate the general superiority of Jacobian splitting in several
experiments.
The second part of the thesis gives a comprehensive analysis of 3-additive linear multistep
methods, designed to separately treat diffusion, reaction, and advection components of differential
equations that model problems in science and engineering. This approach addresses
the limitations of conventional IMEX methods, which typically combine the three terms with
only two numerical methods. The stability and order of convergence of these new methods are
investigated, and their performance is compared with popular IMEX methods. The findings
reveal that the new 3-additive methods generally offer larger stability regions and superior
computational efficiency compared to the tested IMEX methods in certain cases.
Together, these studies contribute to the field of numerical analysis by offering enhanced
methods for the efficient and accurate solution of differential equations in science and engineering,
reflecting significant advancements in the treatment of advection-diffusion-reaction systems.