Higher-order Accurate Meshing of Nonsmooth Implicitly Defined Surfaces and Intersection Curves

Jakob Werner Stanford*, Thomas Peter Fries

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A higher-order accurate meshing algorithm for nonsmooth surfaces defined via Boolean set operations from smooth surfaces is presented. Input data are a set of level-set functions and a bounding box containing the domain of interest. This geometry definition allows the treatment of edges as intersection curves. Initially, the given bounding box is partitioned with an octree that is used to locate corners and points on the intersection curves. Once a point on an intersection curve is found, the edge is traced. Smooth surfaces are discretized using marching cubes and then merged together with the advancing-front method. The piecewise linear geometry is lifted by projecting the inner nodes of the Lagrangian elements onto the surface or intersection curve. To maintain an accurate mesh, special attention is paid to the accurate meshing of tangential intersection curves. Optimal convergence properties for approximation problems are confirmed in numerical studies.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2093–2107
JournalComputational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics
Volume59
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Fields of Expertise

  • Information, Communication & Computing

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