Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
5 years ago
19 mag 2020, 06:25 GMT-4
Ivan,
the void is not empty in electromagnetics, there are the fields. You need to mesh the space if you want to use a finite element method.
If your problem is purely electrostatic, without currents and magnetic fields you might consider to use the Electrostatics, Boundary Elements interface. This avoids to mesh the void, but increases mesh expenses on the boundaries.
Cheers
Edgar
-------------------
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
Ivan,
the void is not empty in electromagnetics, there are the fields. You need to mesh the space if you want to use a finite element method.
If your problem is purely electrostatic, without currents and magnetic fields you might consider to use the Electrostatics, Boundary Elements interface. This avoids to mesh the void, but increases mesh expenses on the boundaries.
Cheers
Edgar
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
5 years ago
19 mag 2020, 07:00 GMT-4
Updated:
5 years ago
19 mag 2020, 07:05 GMT-4
Thank you for answering me, Edgar.
the void is not empty in electromagnetics, there are the fields.
Did you mean that there is no need to fill the empty space in COMSOL?
you might consider to use the Electrostatics
Yes, I use Electrostatics. But when I try to create a plot in plane between electrodes, which placed in some distance one from another, COMSOL warnings me about empty plot.
I created a Cut Plane in Data Sets between electrodes to extract data, but there is no data.
Can I indicate that the surrounding space (in sone planes) should participate in the calculations?
Thank you for answering me, Edgar.
>the void is not empty in electromagnetics, there are the fields.
Did you mean that there is no need to fill the empty space in COMSOL?
>you might consider to use the Electrostatics
Yes, I use Electrostatics. But when I try to create a plot in plane between electrodes, which placed in some distance one from another, COMSOL warnings me about empty plot.
I created a Cut Plane in Data Sets between electrodes to extract data, but there is no data.
Can I indicate that the surrounding space (in sone planes) should participate in the calculations?
Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
5 years ago
19 mag 2020, 07:30 GMT-4
No exactly the opposite. In FEM you must mesh the void. In BEM this is not needed.
-------------------
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
No exactly the opposite. In FEM you must mesh the void. In BEM this is not needed.