Parallel solution of the three-dimensional Marangoni flow instabilities in liquid bridges

Lappa, M. and Savino, R. (1999) Parallel solution of the three-dimensional Marangoni flow instabilities in liquid bridges. International Journal of Numerical Methods in Fluids, 31 (6). pp. 911-935. ISSN 0271-2091 (https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0363(19991130)3...)

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Abstract

This paper describes the implementation and performances of a parallel solver for the direct numerical simulation of the three-dimensional and time-dependent Navier Stokes equations on distributed-memory, massively parallel computers. The feasibility of this approach to study Marangoni flow instability in half zone liquid bridges is examined. The results indicate that the incompressible, non linear Navier-Stokes problem, governing the Marangoni flows behaviour, can effectively be parallelized on a distributed-memory parallel machine by remapping the distributed data structure. The numerical code is based on a three-dimensional Simplified Marker and Cell primitive variable method applied to a staggered finite-difference grid. Using this method, the problem is split in two problems, one parabolic and the other elliptic. A parallel algorithm, explicit in time, is utilized to solve the parabolic equations. A parallel multisplitting kernel is introduced for the solution of the pseudo-pressure elliptic equation, representing the most time-consuming part of the algorithm. A grid-partition strategy is used in the parallel implementations of both the parabolic equations and the multisplitting elliptic kernel. A Message Passing Interface (MPI) is coded for the boundary conditions; this protocol is portable to different systems supporting this interface for interprocessor communications. Numerical experiments illustrate good numerical properties and parallel efficiency. In particular, good scalability on a large number of processors can be achieved as long as the granularity of the parallel application is not too small. However, increasing the number of processors, the Speed-Up is ever smaller than the ideal linear Speed Up. The communication timings indicate that complex practical calculations, such as the solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations for the numerical simulation of the instability of Marangoni flows, can be expected to run on a massively parallel machine with good efficiency.