Academic Editor: J. Rappaz
Copyright © 2013 Keying Ma and Tongjun Sun. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Two types of approximation schemes are established for incompressible miscible
displacements in porous media. First, standard mixed finite element method is used
to approximate the velocity and pressure. And then parallel non-overlapping domain
decomposition methods combined with the characteristics method are presented for
the concentration. These methods use the characteristic method to handle the material
derivative term of the concentration equation in the subdomains and explicit flux
calculations on the interdomain boundaries by integral mean method or extrapolation
method to predict the inner-boundary conditions. Thus, the velocity and pressure can
be approximated simultaneously, and the parallelism can be achieved for the concentration
equation. The explicit nature of the flux prediction induces a time step limitation
that is necessary to preserve stability. These schemes hold the advantages of nonoverlapping
domain decomposition methods and the characteristic method. Optimal
error estimates in -norm are derived for these two schemes, respectively.