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This book addresses the linear and nonlinear two-phase stability of
the one-dimensional Two-Fluid Model (TFM) material waves and the
numerical methods used to solve it. The TFM fluid dynamic stability
is a problem that remains open since its inception more than forty
years ago. The difficulty is formidable because it involves the
combined challenges of two-phase topological structure and
turbulence, both nonlinear phenomena. The one dimensional approach
permits the separation of the former from the latter.The authors
first analyze the kinematic and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities with
the simplified one-dimensional Fixed-Flux Model (FFM). They then
analyze the density wave instability with the well-known Drift-Flux
Model. They demonstrate that the Fixed-Flux and Drift-Flux
assumptions are two complementary TFM simplifications that address
two-phase local and global linear instabilities separately.
Furthermore, they demonstrate with a well-posed FFM and a DFM two
cases of nonlinear two-phase behavior that are chaotic and Lyapunov
stable. On the practical side, they also assess the regularization
of an ill-posed one-dimensional TFM industrial code. Furthermore,
the one-dimensional stability analyses are applied to obtain
well-posed CFD TFMs that are either stable (RANS) or Lyapunov
stable (URANS), with the focus on numerical convergence.
This book addresses the linear and nonlinear two-phase stability of
the one-dimensional Two-Fluid Model (TFM) material waves and the
numerical methods used to solve it. The TFM fluid dynamic stability
is a problem that remains open since its inception more than forty
years ago. The difficulty is formidable because it involves the
combined challenges of two-phase topological structure and
turbulence, both nonlinear phenomena. The one dimensional approach
permits the separation of the former from the latter.The authors
first analyze the kinematic and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities with
the simplified one-dimensional Fixed-Flux Model (FFM). They then
analyze the density wave instability with the well-known Drift-Flux
Model. They demonstrate that the Fixed-Flux and Drift-Flux
assumptions are two complementary TFM simplifications that address
two-phase local and global linear instabilities separately.
Furthermore, they demonstrate with a well-posed FFM and a DFM two
cases of nonlinear two-phase behavior that are chaotic and Lyapunov
stable. On the practical side, they also assess the regularization
of an ill-posed one-dimensional TFM industrial code. Furthermore,
the one-dimensional stability analyses are applied to obtain
well-posed CFD TFMs that are either stable (RANS) or Lyapunov
stable (URANS), with the focus on numerical convergence.
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