RT Journal Article ID 1ee139986732facc A1 Chung, Eric T. A1 Efendiev, Yalchin A1 Leung, Wing T. A1 Wheeler, Mary T1 NONLINEAR NONLOCAL MULTICONTINUA UPSCALING FRAMEWORK AND ITS APPLICATIONS JF International Journal for Multiscale Computational Engineering JO JMC YR 2018 FD 2018-11-20 VO 16 IS 5 SP 487 OP 507 K1 multiscale K1 nonlinear K1 multicontinua K1 upscaling K1 porous media AB We discuss multiscale methods for nonlinear problems by extending recently developed multiscale concepts for linear problems. The main idea of these approaches is to use local constraints and solve problems in oversampled regions for constructing macroscopic equations. These techniques are intended for problems without scale separation and high contrast, which often occur in applications. For linear problems, the local solutions with constraints are used as basis functions. This technique is called Constraint Energy Minimizing Generalized Multiscale Finite Element Method (CEM-GMsFEM). GMsFEM identifies macroscopic quantities based on rigorous analysis. In corresponding upscaling methods, the multiscale basis functions are selected such that the degrees of freedom have physical meanings, such as averages of the solution on each continuum. This paper extends the linear concepts to local nonlinear problems. The main concept consists of: (1) identifying macroscopic quantities; (2) constructing appropriate oversampled local problems with coarse-grid constraints; (3) formulating macroscopic equations. We consider two types of approaches. In the first approach, the solutions of local problems are used as basis functions (in a linear fashion) to solve nonlinear problems. This approach is simple to implement; however, it lacks the nonlinear interpolation, which we present in our second approach. In this approach, the local solutions are used as a nonlinear forward map from local averages (constraints) of the solution in oversampling region. This local fine-grid solution is further used to formulate the coarse-grid problem. Both approaches are discussed on several examples and applied to single-phase and two-phase flow problems, which are challenging because of convection-dominated nature of the concentration equation. The numerical results show that we can achieve good accuracy using our new concepts for these complex problems. PB Begell House LK https://www.dl.begellhouse.com/journals/61fd1b191cf7e96f,5fdc4a7160a52b6d,1ee139986732facc.html