Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
30 nov 2011, 02:24 GMT-5
Hi
you can add a "filer" subnode to your plot and set a Boolean condition there in, or select only 1-2 domains (easier ifyou cut your volume into regions of interest, a few additional internal boundaries are not RAM demanding, and often handy to perform postprocessing on
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
you can add a "filer" subnode to your plot and set a Boolean condition there in, or select only 1-2 domains (easier ifyou cut your volume into regions of interest, a few additional internal boundaries are not RAM demanding, and often handy to perform postprocessing on
--
Good luck
Ivar
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
30 nov 2011, 11:25 GMT-5
Thank you, Ivar. I very much appreciate your help.
Using filter subnode plots arrows only in the required region which is good for me. However it still shows the whole geometry even though I am plotting only in 1/4 of the length. Can we specify the axial length scale in the plot settings using boolean operations?.
I am not yet very comfortable with creating good geometries. Is it easy to cut the final geometry into small domains? or do we need to start from the scratch?
Thank you, Ivar. I very much appreciate your help.
Using filter subnode plots arrows only in the required region which is good for me. However it still shows the whole geometry even though I am plotting only in 1/4 of the length. Can we specify the axial length scale in the plot settings using boolean operations?.
I am not yet very comfortable with creating good geometries. Is it easy to cut the final geometry into small domains? or do we need to start from the scratch?
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
30 nov 2011, 12:12 GMT-5
Hi
not ure about that, but a cleaner way is to make a new data set direced from the original solution (right click data Set) and then include only some selected domains
There is no major difficulty, or complexity by adding several internal boundaries. These can be (in 2D) single lines cutting the geoemtry (i.e. a box) from one side/edge to another or from one vertex to another. Note that by default a "line in COMSOL is a polyline (joint set of lines, that by default will loop around to frm a domain. In 3D you need to define surfaces, or via workplanes with a closed loop surface
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
not ure about that, but a cleaner way is to make a new data set direced from the original solution (right click data Set) and then include only some selected domains
There is no major difficulty, or complexity by adding several internal boundaries. These can be (in 2D) single lines cutting the geoemtry (i.e. a box) from one side/edge to another or from one vertex to another. Note that by default a "line in COMSOL is a polyline (joint set of lines, that by default will loop around to frm a domain. In 3D you need to define surfaces, or via workplanes with a closed loop surface
--
Good luck
Ivar