Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Triple-decker: Interfacing atomistic-mesoscopic-continuum flow regimes

Journal Article · · Journal of Computational Physics
 [1]
  1. Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, 182 George St., Box F, Providence, RI 02912 (United States)

Multiscale flow phenomena in microfluidic and biomedical applications require the use of heterogeneous modeling approaches. In this paper we present a hybrid method based on coupling the Molecular Dynamics (MD) method, the Dissipative Particle Dynamics (DPD) method, and the incompressible Navier-Stokes (NS) equations. MD, DPD, and NS are formulated in separate subdomains and are coupled via an overlapping region by communicating state information at the subdomain boundaries. Imposition of boundary conditions in the MD and DPD systems involves particle insertion and deletion, specular wall reflection and body force terms. The latter includes a boundary pressure force in order to minimize near-boundary density fluctuations, and an adaptive shear force which enforces the tangential velocity component of boundary conditions. The triple-decker algorithm is verified for prototype flows, including simple and multi-layer fluids (Couette, Poiseuille, and lid-driven cavity), using highly accurate reference solutions. A zero-thickness interface is also possible if it is aligned with the flow streamlines.

OSTI ID:
21167752
Journal Information:
Journal of Computational Physics, Journal Name: Journal of Computational Physics Journal Issue: 4 Vol. 228; ISSN JCTPAH; ISSN 0021-9991
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

Concurrent coupling of atomistic simulation and mesoscopic hydrodynamics for flows over soft multi-functional surfaces
Journal Article · Wed Feb 27 23:00:00 EST 2019 · Soft Matter · OSTI ID:1710202

Concurrent coupling of atomistic simulation and mesoscopic hydrodynamics for flows over soft multi-functional surfaces
Journal Article · Mon Jan 14 23:00:00 EST 2019 · Soft Matter · OSTI ID:1613243

A dissipative particle dynamics method for arbitrarily complex geometries
Journal Article · Wed Jan 31 23:00:00 EST 2018 · Journal of Computational Physics · OSTI ID:1565652