Lecture3 PDF
Lecture3 PDF
Of the preceding two types, mesh-based methods are more popular in CFD. Of these, finite volume method has been the most popular due to its simplicity and ease of application for problems in complex geometries. In fact, majority of commercial CFD packages (e.g. Fluent, StarCD, etc.) are based on finite volume method. In this lecture, we will have a brief overview of finite difference, finite element and finite volume methods.
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on all aspects of this method: type of elements, shape functions, mesh generation, applications to different type of problems, etc. For detailed study of FEM, interested reader can refer to books by Zienkiewicz et al. (2005a, 2005b), Reddy (2005), Reddy and Gartling (2010) amongst others.
REFERENCES/SUGGESTED READING
Anderson, J. D., Jr. (1995). Computational Fluid Dynamics: The Basics with Applications. McGraw Hill, New York. Ferziger, J. H. And Peri, M. (2003). Computational Methods for Fluid Dynamics. Springer. Reddy, J. N. (2005). An Introduction to the Finite Element Method. 3rd Ed., McGraw Hill, New York. Reddy, J. N. and Gartling, D. K. (2010). The Finite Element Method in Heat Transfer and Fluid Dynamics, 3rd ed., CRC Press Versteeg, H. K. and Malalasekera, W. M. G. (2007). Introduction to Computational Fluid Dynamics: The Finite Volume Method. Second Edition (Indian Reprint) Pearson Education Zienkiewicz, O. C., Taylor, R. L., Nithiarasu, P. (2005a). The Finite Element Method for Fluid Dynamics, Butterworth-Heinemann (Elsevier). Zienkiewicz, O. C., Taylor, R. L., Zhu, J. Z. (2005b). The Finite Element Method: Its Basis and Fundamentals, 6th Ed., Butterworth-Heinemann (Elsevier).
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