Citation:
Reynolds-Barredo, J. M., Peraza-Rodríguez, H., Sanchez, R., & Tribaldos, V. (2020). A novel efficient solver for Ampere’s equation in general toroidal topologies based on singular value decomposition techniques. In Journal of Computational Physics, 406, 109214-109229
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España) Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Sponsor:
This research has been sponsored in part by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain under
Project No. ENE2015-68265-P. Use have also been made of Uranus, a supercomputer cluster located at Universidad Carlos
III de Madrid (Spain) funded jointly by EU FEDER Project No. UNC313-4E-2361, by the Ministerio de Economía, Industria y
Competitividad (MICINN) via the National Research Project No. ENE2009-12213-C03-03 and by the Ministerio de Economía
y Competitividad (MINECO) via the National Research Project Nos. ENE2012-33219 and ENE2012-31753.
Project:
Gobierno de España. ENE2009-12213-C03-03 Gobierno de España. ENE2012-33219 Gobierno de España. ENE2012-31753 Indefinido. UNC313-4E-2361 Gobierno de España. ENE2015-68265-P
Keywords:
Ampere's law
,
Mhd
,
Singular value decomposition
,
Spectral method
,
Svd
,
Toroidal topology
A new method is proposed to solve Ampere's equation in an arbitrary toroidal domain in which all currents are known, given proper boundary conditions for the magnetic vector potential. The novelty of the approach lies in the application of singular value decomA new method is proposed to solve Ampere's equation in an arbitrary toroidal domain in which all currents are known, given proper boundary conditions for the magnetic vector potential. The novelty of the approach lies in the application of singular value decomposition (SVD) techniques to tackle the difficulties caused by the kernel associated by the curl operator. This kernel originates physically due to the magnetic field gauge. To increase the efficiency of the solver, the problem is represented by means of a dual finite difference-spectral scheme in arbitrary generalized toroidal coordinates, which permits to take advantage of the block structure exhibited by the matrices that describe the discretized problem. The result is a fast and efficient solver, up to three times faster than the double-curl method in some cases, that provides an accurate solution of the differential form of Ampere law while guaranteeing a zero divergence of the resulting magnetic field down to machine precision.[+][-]