About: Finite difference method is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 21603 publications have been published within this topic receiving 468852 citations. The topic is also known as: Finite-difference methods & FDM.
TL;DR: Two distinctly different approaches have been used to simulate the movement of bands through a chromatographic column: the first is based on the mass balance equation which can be integrated numerically over time and space to give the elution profile as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Two distinctly different approaches have been used to simulate the movement of bands through a chromatographic column One example of the first approach is the Craig distribution model, which replaces the continuous column with a specific number of discrete equilibration processes Thus it introduces the concept of (theoretical) plates into chromatography, but is not able to explain satisfactorily their significance The second approach is based on the mass balance equation which can be integrated numerically over time and space to give the elution profile In this paper we discuss the physical meaning of the numerical integration process followed by the finite difference methods
TL;DR: In this article, variable space grid and boundary immobilization techniques based on the explicit finite difference are applied to the one-phase classical Stefan problem, and all the results obtained by the two methods are in good agreement with the exact solution, and exhibit the expected convergence as the mesh size is refined.
TL;DR: In this paper, a new implementation for simulating elastic wave propagation in which the free-surface condition is replaced by an explicit acoustic-elastic boundary was developed for the air-earth boundary.
Abstract: The need for incorporating the traction-free condition at the air-earth boundary for finite-difference modeling of seismic wave propagation has been discussed widely. A new implementation has been developed for simulating elastic wave propagation in which the free-surface condition is replaced by an explicit acoustic-elastic boundary. Detailed comparisons of seismograms with different implementations for the air-earth boundary were undertaken using the (2,2) (the finite-difference operators are second order in time and space) and the (2,6) (second order in time and sixth order in space) standard staggered-grid (SSG) schemes. Methods used in these comparisons to define the air-earth boundary included the stress image method (SIM), the heterogeneous approach, the scheme of modifying material properties based on transversely isotropic medium approach, the acoustic-elastic boundary approach, and an analytical approach. The method proposed achieves the same or higher accuracy of modeled body waves relative to the SIM. Rayleigh waves calculated using the explicit acoustic-elastic boundary approach differ slightly from those calculated using the SIM. Numerical results indicate that when using the (2,2) SSG scheme for SIM and our new method, a spatial step of 16 points per minimum wavelength is sufficient to achieve 90% accuracy; 32 points per minimum wavelength achieves 95% accuracy in modeled Rayleigh waves. When using the (2,6) SSG scheme for the two methods, a spatial step of eight points per minimum wavelength achieves 95% accuracy in modeled Rayleigh waves. Our proposed method is physically reasonable and, based on dispersive analysis of simulated seismographs from a layered half-space model, is highly accurate. As a bonus, our proposed method is easy to program and slightly faster than the SIM.
TL;DR: A nonlinear modal analysis approach based on the invariant manifold method proposed earlier by Boivin et al. as discussed by the authors is applied in this paperto perform the dynamic analysis of a micro switch, which is modeled as a clamped-clamped microbeam subjected to a transverseelectrostatic force.
Abstract: A nonlinear modal analysis approach based on the invariant manifoldmethod proposed earlier by Boivin et al. [10] is applied in this paperto perform the dynamic analysis of a micro switch. The micro switch ismodeled as a clamped-clamped microbeam subjected to a transverseelectrostatic force. Two kinds of nonlinearities are encountered in thenonlinear system: geometric nonlinearity of the microbeam associatedwith large deflection, and nonlinear coupling between two energydomains. Using Galerkin method, the nonlinear partial differentialgoverning equation is decoupled into a set of nonlinear ordinarydifferential equations. Based on the invariant manifold method, theassociated nonlinear modal shapes, and modal motion governing equationsare obtained. The equation of motion restricted to these manifolds,which provide the dynamics of the associated normal modes, are solved bythe approach of nonlinear normal forms. Nonlinearities and the pull-inphenomena are examined. The numerical results are compared with thoseobtained from the finite difference method. The estimate for the pull-involtage of the micro device is also presented.
TL;DR: In this article, a method of solution of the compressible turbulent boundary-layer equations for twodimensional and axisymmetric flows, with transverse-curvature effects, is presented.
Abstract: A method of solution of the compressible turbulent boundary-layer equations for twodimensional and axisymmetric flows, with transverse-curvature effects, is presented. The Reynolds shear-stress term is eliminated by an eddy-viscosity concept and the time mean of the product of a fluctuating velocity and temperature term appearing in the energy equation is eliminated by an eddy-conductivity concept. An implicit finite-difference method is used in the solution of both momentum and energy equations after they are linearized. Results are presented for several adiabatic compressible flows, with and without pressure gradients for Mach numbers up to 5. The results show that the method is quite accurate and fast; a typical flow can be calculated in one or two minutes on the IBM 360/65 computer.