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High-order finite volume and finite element methods offer impressive accuracy and cost efficiency when solving hyperbolic conservation laws with smooth solutions. However, if the solution contains discontinuities, these high-order methods can introduce unphysical oscillations and severe overshoots/undershoots. Slope limiters are an effective remedy, combating these oscillations by preserving monotonicity. Some limiters can even maintain a strict maximum principle in the numerical solution. They can be classified into one of two categories: a priori and a posteriori limiters. The former revises the high-order solution based only on data at the current time tⁿ, while the latter involves computing a candidate solution at t^n+1 and iteratively recomputing it until some conditions are satisfied. These two limiting paradigms are available for both finite volume and finite element methods. In this work, we develop a methodology to compare a priori and a posteriori limiters for finite volume solvers at arbitrarily high order. We select the maximum principle preserving scheme presented in zhang2011maximum, zhang2010maximum as our a priori limited scheme. For a posteriori limiting, we adopt the methodology presented in clain2011high and search for so-called troubled cells in the candidate solution. We revise them with a robust MUSCL fallback scheme. The linear advection equation is solved in both one and two dimensions and we compare variations of these limited schemes based on their ability to maintain a maximum principle, solution quality over long time integration and computational cost. . . .
Palafoutas et al. (Sat,) studied this question.