Hong Zhang, Gengen Zhang, Ziyuan Liu, Xu Qian, Songhe Song
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The stabilization approach has been known to permit large time-step sizes while maintaining stability. However, it may “slow down the convergence rate” or cause “delayed convergence” if the time-step rescaling is not well resolved. By considering a fourth-order-in-space viscous Cahn–Hilliard (VCH) equation, we propose a class of up to the fourth-order single-step methods that are able to capture the correct physical behaviors with high-order accuracy and without time delay. By reformulating the VCH as a system consisting of a second-order diffusion term and a nonlinear term involving the operator \(({I} - \nu \Delta )^{-1}\), we first develop a general approach to estimate the maximum bound for the VCH equation equipped with either the Ginzburg–Landau or Flory–Huggins potential. Then, by taking advantage of new recursive approximations and adopting a time-step-dependent stabilization, we propose a class of stabilization Runge–Kutta methods that preserve the maximum principle for any time-step size without harming the convergence. Finally, we transform the stabilization method into a parametric Runge–Kutta formulation, estimate the rescaled time-step, and remove the time delay by means of a relaxation technique. When the stabilization parameter is chosen suitably, the proposed parametric relaxation integrators are rigorously proven to be mass-conserving, maximum-principle-preserving, and the convergence in the \(l^\infty \)-norm is estimated with pth-order accuracy under mild regularity assumption. Numerical experiments on multi-dimensional benchmark problems are carried out to demonstrate the stability, accuracy, and structure-preserving properties of the proposed schemes.
期刊介绍:
Advances in Computational Mathematics publishes high quality, accessible and original articles at the forefront of computational and applied mathematics, with a clear potential for impact across the sciences. The journal emphasizes three core areas: approximation theory and computational geometry; numerical analysis, modelling and simulation; imaging, signal processing and data analysis.
This journal welcomes papers that are accessible to a broad audience in the mathematical sciences and that show either an advance in computational methodology or a novel scientific application area, or both. Methods papers should rely on rigorous analysis and/or convincing numerical studies.