Aphros Save

Finite volume solver for incompressible multiphase flows with surface tension. Foaming flows in complex geometries.

Project README

Aphros

Finite volume solver for incompressible multiphase flows with surface tension.

Key features:

  • implementation in C++14
  • scalability to thousands of compute nodes
  • fluid solver based on SIMPLE or Bell-Colella-Glaz methods
  • advection with PLIC volume-of-fluid
  • particle method for curvature estimation accurate at low resolutions [demo] [4]
  • Multi-VOF for scalable coalescence prevention [demo] [8] [11]

Gallery of interactive simulations

Gallery wiki Curvature Multi-VOF Electrochemistry Parser

Documentation

Online documentation and PDF generated by doc/sphinx.

Default parameters are listed in deploy/scripts/sim_base.conf.

Requirements

C++14, CMake

Optional dependencies: MPI, parallel HDF5, python3, python3-numpy

Bundled optional dependencies: hypre, overlap, fpzip

Clone and build

git clone https://github.com/cselab/aphros.git

First, follow deploy/README.md to prepare environment and install dependencies. Then build with

cd src
make

Code Ocean

The Code Ocean platform hosts the following compute capsule

which builds Aphros in a Linux environment, runs a set of examples, and visualizes the results.

Docker

Instead of building the code in your system, you can build a Docker container and run a simulation example

docker build github.com/cselab/aphros --tag aphros
cd examples/202_coalescence/standalone
./conf
docker run -v `pwd`:`pwd` -w `pwd` aphros

Minimal build without CMake

Build without dependencies and tests on Unix-like systems (APHROS_PREFIX is the installation directory, with USE_MPI=1, USE_HDF=1, USE_OPENCL=1, USE_AVX=1 builds with MPI, parallel HDF5 library, OpenCL, and AVX extensions):

cd src
../make/bootstrap
make -f Makefile_legacy install APHROS_PREFIX=$HOME/.local USE_MPI=0 USE_HDF=0 USE_OPENCL=0 USE_AVX=0

on Windows using Microsoft C++ toolset (NMAKE, LINK, and CL):

cd src
../make/bootstrap # Requires sh and awk.
nmake /f NMakefile

Videos

Examples of simulations visualized using ParaView and OSPRay. Links [conf] lead to the solver configuration.

Coalescence of bubbles [conf] [4] Taylor-Green vortex with bubbles [2] [5]
Bubble jump-off [1] Electrochemical reactor [conf] [9]
Bubble trapped by vortex ring [5] Plunging jet [2]
Clustering of bubbles [conf] [6] [7] [11] Foaming waterfall [conf] [8] [11]
Bidisperse foam [conf] [11] Microfluidic crystals [conf] [11]
LAMMPS polymers in Taylor-Green vortex [conf] Bubble pipe optimization [10]
Bubbles through mesh
APS Gallery of Fluid Motion 2019 award winner
Breaking waves: to foam or not to foam? [6]
Collaboration with Jean M. Favre at CSCS.

Developers

Aphros is developed by researchers at ETH Zurich and Harvard University

advised by

Other contributors are: Fabian Wermelinger (Cubism backend)

Publications

  1. Hashemi SMH, Karnakov P, Hadikhani P, Chinello E, Litvinov S, Moser C, Koumoutsakos P, Psaltis D. A versatile and membrane-less electrochemical reactor for the electrolysis of water and brine. Energy & environmental science. 2019 10.1039/C9EE00219G
  2. Karnakov P, Wermelinger F, Chatzimanolakis M, Litvinov S, Koumoutsakos P. A high performance computing framework for multiphase, turbulent flows on structured grids. Proceedings of the platform for advanced scientific computing conference on – PASC ’19. 2019 10.1145/3324989.3325727 [pdf]
  3. Karnakov P, Litvinov S, Koumoutsakos P. Coalescence and transport of bubbles and drops. 10th International Conference on Multiphase Flow (ICMF). 2019 [pdf]
  4. Karnakov P, Litvinov S, and Koumoutsakos P. A hybrid particle volume-of-fluid method for curvature estimation in multiphase flows. International journal of multiphase flow. 2020 10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2020.103209 arXiv:1906.00314
  5. Wan Z, Karnakov P, Koumoutsakos P, Sapsis T. Bubbles in Turbulent Flows: Data-driven, kinematic models with history terms. International journal of multiphase flow. 2020 10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2020.103286 arXiv:1910.02068
  6. Karnakov P, Litvinov S, Favre JM, Koumoutsakos P. V0018: Breaking waves: to foam or not to foam? Gallery of Fluid Motion Award video article
  7. Annual report 2019 of the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (cover page) [link]
  8. Karnakov P, Wermelinger F, Litvinov S, Koumoutsakos P. Aphros: High Performance Software for Multiphase Flows with Large Scale Bubble and Drop Clusters. Proceedings of the platform for advanced scientific computing conference on – PASC ’20. 2020 10.1145/3394277.3401856 [pdf]
  9. Karnakov P. The multilayer volume-of-fluid method for multiphase flows across scales: breaking waves, microfluidics, and membrane-less electrolyzers. PhD thesis. ETH Zurich. 2021 10.3929/ethz-b-000547518
  10. Martin SM, Wälchli D, Arampatzis G, Economides AE, Karnakov P, Koumoutsakos P. Korali: Efficient and scalable software framework for Bayesian uncertainty quantification and stochastic optimization. Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering. 2021 10.1016/j.cma.2021.114264
  11. Karnakov P, Litvinov S, Koumoutsakos P. Computing foaming flows across scales: from breaking waves to microfluidics. Science Advances. 2022 10.1126/sciadv.abm0590

Citing

If you use Aphros in your work, please consider using the following

@article{aphros2022,
  author = {Petr Karnakov  and Sergey Litvinov  and Petros Koumoutsakos},
  title = {Computing foaming flows across scales: From breaking waves to microfluidics},
  journal = {Science Advances},
  volume = {8},
  number = {5},
  pages = {eabm0590},
  year = {2022},
  doi = {10.1126/sciadv.abm0590},
  URL = {https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/sciadv.abm0590},
  eprint = {https://www.science.org/doi/pdf/10.1126/sciadv.abm0590},
}
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