Design and analysis of a lightweight parallel adaptive scheme for the solution of the monodomain equation
POTSE, Mark
Institute of Computational Science
Modélisation et calculs pour l'électrophysiologie cardiaque [CARMEN]
Institut de Mathématiques de Bordeaux [IMB]
IHU-LIRYC
< Leer menos
Institute of Computational Science
Modélisation et calculs pour l'électrophysiologie cardiaque [CARMEN]
Institut de Mathématiques de Bordeaux [IMB]
IHU-LIRYC
Idioma
en
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing. 2014-04-01, vol. 36, n° 2, p. C163-C189
Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
Resumen en inglés
Numerical simulation of the nonlinear reaction-diffusion equations in computational electrocardiology requires locally high spatial resolution to capture the multiscale effects related to the electrical activation of the ...Leer más >
Numerical simulation of the nonlinear reaction-diffusion equations in computational electrocardiology requires locally high spatial resolution to capture the multiscale effects related to the electrical activation of the heart accurately, namely the strongly varying transmembrane potential. Here, we propose a novel lightweight adaptive algorithm which aims at ombining the plainness of structured meshes with the resolving capabilities of unstructered adaptive meshes. Our "patchwise adaptive" approach is based on locally structured mesh hierarchies which are glued along their interfaces by a nonconforming mortar element discretization. To further increase the overall efficiency, we keep the spatial meshes constant over suitable time windows in which error indicators are accumulated. This approach facilitates strongly varying mesh sizes in neighboring patches as well as in consecutive time steps. For the transfer of the dynamic variables between different spatial approximation spaces we compare the L2-projection and a local approximation. Finally, since an implicit-explicit time discretization is employed for stability reasons, we derive a spatial preconditioner which is tailored to the special structure of the patchwise adaptive meshes. We analyze the (parallel) performance and scalability of the resulting method by several examples from computational electrocardiology of different sizes. Additionally, we compare our method to a standard adaptive refinement strategy using unstructured meshes. As it turns out, our novel adaptive scheme provides a very good balance between reduction in degrees of freedom and overall (parallel) efficiency.< Leer menos
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