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Model Library: Gravity and Boundary Conditions
Posted 2 ott 2012, 09:33 GMT-4 Fluid & Heat, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), Modeling Tools & Definitions, Parameters, Variables, & Functions Version 4.3 1 Reply
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I have practiced a tutorial from Model Library called 'Gravity and Boundary Conditions'. There are 3 cases there.
1. Add 'Volume Force = -g_const*spf.rho' and specify 'Outlet' boundary condition as 'Pressure, no viscous stress' and then set 'p0 = -g_const*spf.rho*y'
2. Add 'Volume Force = -g_const*spf.rho' and specify 'Outlet' boundary condition as 'No viscous stress' and add 'Pressure Point Constraint' then set 'p0 = 0' at the lowest point of the outlet boundary
3. No volume force and specify 'Outlet' boundary condition as 'No viscous stress'
I found that the first 2 cases provide a very similar solution while the third one provide a very different. However, the tutorial does not say explicitly about the circumstances that we should use these settings. So I guess that the first two settings are for the case that the buoyancy effect is dominant and the last one is for the case that has no buoyancy effect. Is my understanding correct?
By the way, what are the differences between cases 1 and 2? What circumstances will we use case 1?
Thank you.
Atit
1. Add 'Volume Force = -g_const*spf.rho' and specify 'Outlet' boundary condition as 'Pressure, no viscous stress' and then set 'p0 = -g_const*spf.rho*y'
2. Add 'Volume Force = -g_const*spf.rho' and specify 'Outlet' boundary condition as 'No viscous stress' and add 'Pressure Point Constraint' then set 'p0 = 0' at the lowest point of the outlet boundary
3. No volume force and specify 'Outlet' boundary condition as 'No viscous stress'
I found that the first 2 cases provide a very similar solution while the third one provide a very different. However, the tutorial does not say explicitly about the circumstances that we should use these settings. So I guess that the first two settings are for the case that the buoyancy effect is dominant and the last one is for the case that has no buoyancy effect. Is my understanding correct?
By the way, what are the differences between cases 1 and 2? What circumstances will we use case 1?
Thank you.
Atit
1 Reply Last Post 2 ott 2012, 15:30 GMT-4