Discussion Closed This discussion was created more than 6 months ago and has been closed. To start a new discussion with a link back to this one, click here.
Laminar flow – how to get force acting on outlet?
Posted 7 feb 2021, 05:15 GMT-5 Fluid & Heat, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Version 5.5 0 Replies
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Hi all, I’m new to physics simulation and I’m trying out comsol to see if I can learn a little about this.
I wanted to start with something I thought would be a really simple problem, but now have a problem figuring out how to get the force acting on my objects.
- I created a 2 dimensional model with laminar flow and stationary study.
- Under Component 1 I created a first circle c1, radius 1000 mm with center at x y coordinate 0,0
- Then I created two small circles with radius 10 mm; c2 at coordinate -50,0 and c3 at coordinate 50,0
- I added a Difference operation to subtract c2 and c3 from the area of c1, so now I had a large circular area with two small holes in it on each side of it’s center.
- I added hydrogen to materials.
- Under laminar flow I added an inlet and selected the 4 boundaries of c1 and a velocity of 1 m/s.
- I added an outlet and selected the 8 boundaries of c2 and c3 and a pressure of 1 Pa.
- Under study 1 I had to set Stationary Solver 1 to Linear to get rid of convergence problems.
When the above is computed I get a velocity field that looks like what I expected, and a pressure field that looks like it could be at least close to correct. Wow, so far so good!
Now I wanted to study the net force (the resultant) acting on the outlet c2. So I added an Integral to Results and set the dataset to sol1 and method to Summation over nodes. I set Integral 1 Selection to the 4 boundaries of c2.
The resultant should be 1 vector (strength and direction), but I haven’t figured out yet how to display this in a table so I created a 1D plot group with Dataset set to Integral 1. Under this plot group I created a Point graph and set y-Axis Data to expression reacf(comp1.u).
All I get out of this is one point (which is expected) at 0 on the y-axis, which to me looks like the force is 0, which it can’t be.
I suspect the expression reacf(comp1.u) might not be correct, but can’t figure out what it should be.
How can I compute and display the resultant force acting on c2?
Hello Mikl Kent
Your Discussion has gone 30 days without a reply. If you still need help with COMSOL and have an on-subscription license, please visit our Support Center for help.
If you do not hold an on-subscription license, you may find an answer in another Discussion or in the Knowledge Base.