Modeling blood flow in larger vessels using lattice-Boltzmann methods comes with a challenging set of constraints: a complex geometry with walls and inlets and outlets at arbitrary orientations with respect to the lattice, intermediate Reynolds (Re) number, and unsteady flow. Simple bounce-back is one of the most commonly used, simplest, and most computationally efficient boundary conditions, but many others have been proposed. We implement three other methods applicable to complex geometries [Guo, Zheng, and Shi, Phys. Fluids 14, 2007 (2002)PHFLE61070-663110.1063/1.1471914; Bouzidi, Firdaouss, and Lallemand, Phys. Fluids 13, 3452 (2001)PHFLE61070-663110.1063/1.1399290; Junk and Yang, Phys. Rev. E 72, 066701 (2005)PLEEE81539-375510.1103/PhysRevE.72.066701] in our open-source application hemelb. We use these to simulate Poiseuille and Womersley flows in a cylindrical pipe with an arbitrary orientation at physiologically relevant Re number (1-300) and Womersley (4-12) numbers and steady flow in a curved pipe at relevant Dean number (100-200) and compare the accuracy to analytical solutions. We find that both the Bouzidi-Firdaouss- Lallemand (BFL) and Guo-Zheng-Shi (GZS) methods give second-order convergence in space while simple bounce-back degrades to first order. The BFL method appears to perform better than GZS in unsteady flows and is significantly less computationally expensive. The Junk-Yang method shows poor stability at larger Re number and so cannot be recommended here. The choice of collision operator (lattice Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook vs multiple relaxation time) and velocity set (D3Q15 vs D3Q19 vs D3Q27) does not significantly affect the accuracy in the problems studied. © 2014 Published by the American Physical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Nash, R. W., Carver, H. B., Bernabeu, M. O., Hetherington, J., Groen, D., Krüger, T., & Coveney, P. V. (2014). Choice of boundary condition for lattice-Boltzmann simulation of moderate-Reynolds-number flow in complex domains. Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics, 89(2). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.89.023303
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