Timo Koch successfully defended his doctoral thesis

February 21, 2020 /

Congratulations to doctoral researcher Timo Koch for successfully defending his doctoral thesis!

Doctoral researcher Timo Koch from the Department of Hydromechanics and Modelling of Hydrosystems (LH2) successfully defend his PhD thesis "Mixed-dimension embedded models for flow and transport processes in porous media with embedded tubular network systems". Congratulations, Timo!

Timo Koch accomplished his PhD in the framework of the Graduate School of SimTech, funded by the German Research Fondation (DFG).

Dissertation Abstract

Flow in vascularized biological tissue, root water uptake, or flow around injection or extraction wells can be modeled by coupled mixed-dimensional PDE systems. Conceptually, such systems can be described as porous media with embedded tubular transport networks. We describe numerical methods for the simulation of such systems. The compartments are spatially discretized by non-matching computational grids: a three-dimensional mesh for the porous medium domain, and a geometrically embedded mesh of connected line segments for the network domain. A generalized abstract form of mixed-dimension embedded models is presented which summarizes several existing methods. A particularity of solutions to mixed-dimensional PDEs with dimensional gap two (0D-2D or 1D-3D) is the occurrence of singularities where the network center-lines intersect the porous domain. We introduce a new numerical scheme which removes these singularities by smoothing kernels, and exhibits improved convergence behavior and accuracy for coarse grid resolutions. The method is developed for isotropic, as well as anisotropic porous media. Furthermore, a new mixed-dimension embedded model for tissue perfusion and NMR signal generation is presented. Detailed perfusion simulations on the capillary scale are shown to reproduce image contrast of clinical (organ-scale) MRI data from multiple sclerosis patients. Similar modeling techniques and methods are then used to simulate root water uptake. For the implementation of such applications, a common software framework is developed by use of the open-source simulator \DuMuX The framework allows the implementation of coupled mixed- and equidimensional models in a unified way, using software abstractions. Possible framework applications go beyond the methods presented in this work.

First supervisor: apl. Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Bernd Flemisch
Secondary Supervisors: Prof. Dr. Patrick Jenny (Dept. of Mechanical and Process Engineering, ETH Zürich), Prof. Dr. Dominik Obrist (ARTORG Center for Biomedical Engineering Research, Uni Bern), Prof. Dr.-Ing. Rainer Helmig

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