Immersed Boundary Double Layer Method: An introduction of methodology on the Helmholtz equation
Brittany J. Leathers, Robert D. Guy

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Immersed Boundary Double Layer (IBDL) method, a new well-conditioned formulation for boundary value problems like Helmholtz, improving efficiency and convergence over traditional IB methods, especially for complex geometries.
Contribution
The paper presents the IBDL method, a novel, well-conditioned approach for immersed boundary problems that enhances computational efficiency and extends applicability to Neumann boundary conditions.
Findings
The IBDL method results in a well-conditioned second-kind integral equation.
It achieves convergence independent of mesh size and boundary point spacing.
The method is effective for both Dirichlet and Neumann boundary conditions.
Abstract
The Immersed Boundary (IB) method of Peskin (J. Comput. Phys., 1977) is useful for problems involving fluid-structure interactions or complex geometries. By making use of a regular Cartesian grid that is independent of the geometry, the IB framework yields a robust numerical scheme that can efficiently handle immersed deformable structures. Additionally, the IB method has been adapted to problems with prescribed motion and other PDEs with given boundary data. IB methods for these problems traditionally involve penalty forces which only approximately satisfy boundary conditions, or they are formulated as constraint problems. In the latter approach, one must find the unknown forces by solving an equation that corresponds to a poorly conditioned first-kind integral equation. This operation can require a large number of iterations of a Krylov method, and since a time-dependent problem…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies · Aerosol Filtration and Electrostatic Precipitation · Fluid Dynamics and Vibration Analysis
