A second-order particle Fokker-Planck-Master method for diatomic gas flows
Joonbeom Kim, Eunji Jun

TL;DR
This paper introduces a second-order accurate stochastic particle Fokker-Planck-Master method for diatomic gas flows, significantly improving computational efficiency and accuracy over traditional DSMC methods, especially in hypersonic flow simulations.
Contribution
It develops a unified stochastic particle Fokker-Planck-Master method with second-order accuracy for diatomic gases, enhancing efficiency and physical fidelity in rarefied gas flow simulations.
Findings
Achieves second-order accuracy in time and space for diatomic gas modeling.
Provides accurate solutions with coarser grids and larger time steps.
Achieves a 28-fold speed-up in hypersonic flow simulations around a cylinder.
Abstract
The direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method is widely used to describe rarefied gas flows. The DSMC method accounts for the transport and collisions of computational particles, resulting in higher computational costs in the continuum regime. The Fokker-Planck (FP) model approximates particle collisions as Brownian motion to reduce computational cost. Advanced FP models have been developed to enhance physical fidelity, ensuring the correct Prandtl number and the H-theorem. The FP model has further been extended to handle diatomic gases, such as the Fokker-Planck-Master (FPM) model. Alongside these developments in modeling, computational efficiency has also been improved by achieving second-order spatial and temporal accuracy, as demonstrated in the unified stochastic particle FP (USP-FP) method. However, these accuracy improvements have not yet been extended to diatomic gases, which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGas Dynamics and Kinetic Theory · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Atmospheric aerosols and clouds
