Sharp interfaces in two dimensional free boundary problems: Efficient interface calculation via matched conformal maps
Stuart Kent, Shankar C. Venkataramani

TL;DR
This paper introduces an adaptive multi-scale conformal mapping method to accurately compute free boundary problems with sharp corners in two-fluid electromechanical systems, overcoming numerical challenges caused by boundary singularities.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel multi-scale conformal mapping technique that enables stitching solutions across different boundary regions, improving numerical resolution of sharp interfaces.
Findings
Successfully applied to electromechanical free boundary problem
Effectively resolves sharp corners and singularities
Generalizable to other boundary problems
Abstract
We use conformal maps to study a free boundary problem for a two-fluid electromechanical system, where the interface between the fluids is determined by the combined effects of electrostatic forces, gravity and surface tension. The free boundary in our system develops sharp corners/singularities in certain parameter regimes, and this is an impediment to using existing "single-scale" numerical conformal mapping methods. The difficulty is due to the phenomenon of crowding, i.e. the tendency of nodes in the preimage plane to concentrate near the sharp regions of the boundary, leaving the smooth regions of the boundary poorly resolved. A natural idea is to exploit the scale separation between the sharp regions and smooth regions to solve for each region separately, and then stitch the solutions together. However, this is not straightforward as conformal maps are rigid "global" objects, and…
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