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Implicit approximation can be solved using: Point iteration (G/S, SOR) Direct (matrix) solution Combination of matrix soln and iteration (used in MODFLOW). Solve by iteration. or. 1D. Implicit Approximation. In this form, the equation can be solved directly
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Implicit approximation can be solved using: • Point iteration (G/S, SOR) • Direct (matrix) solution • Combination of matrix soln and iteration • (used in MODFLOW)
Solve by iteration or 1D Implicit Approximation
In this form, the equation can be solved directly using matrix methods. See W&A, p. 95. All known terms are on the RHS; all unknown terms are on the LHS.
Tridiagonal solution oriented along columns The motivation behind the Alternating Direction Implicit Procedure is to keep the coefficient matrix tridiagonal so that we can use the Thomas algorithm to solve the matrix equation. Not tridiagonal
In the next time step, the solution is oriented along rows. Tridiagonal solution oriented along rows
In point iteration, the 5-point operator moves over each node in the grid….
In the ADI matrix solution, the 5-point equations are assembled into one matrix equation for each column (or row).
Examples of solution techniques that combine matrix solution with iteration: IADI (see chapter 5 of W&A) SSOR* SIP* PCG2* *Used in MODFLOW