Sven Friedel
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
8 years ago
29 déc. 2016, 07:19 UTC−5
Hi,
where do you plot those quantities - in a domain or on a line?
Sven
Hi,
where do you plot those quantities - in a domain or on a line?
Sven
Sven Friedel
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
8 years ago
29 déc. 2016, 07:23 UTC−5
Note that the SPF interface comes with a reference pressure level of 1[atm], it may be that you evaluate your material properties at 1[atm]+0.4[mbar] rather than at 0.4[mbar].
Note that the SPF interface comes with a reference pressure level of 1[atm], it may be that you evaluate your material properties at 1[atm]+0.4[mbar] rather than at 0.4[mbar].
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Posted:
8 years ago
29 déc. 2016, 10:08 UTC−5
Note that the SPF interface comes with a reference pressure level of 1[atm], it may be that you evaluate your material properties at 1[atm]+0.4[mbar] rather than at 0.4[mbar].
Yes indeed... I realize that I was not understanding correctly the role of the reference pressure level in the computation. I set it to 0.4 mbar which means that the actual pressure in the vessel was 0.8mbar instead of 0.4 hence the factor two in SPF.rho. I set it to the base pressure of my system 1e-8 [mbar] and it works now !
As I understand it know the reference pressure level is a pressure which is there indepedently of the computation. Then the computation "adds" or "remove" pressure based on the inlet and outlets of the system (correct me if I'm wrong..).
Thanks for educating me and sorry for this question that I should have solved myself..
[QUOTE]
Note that the SPF interface comes with a reference pressure level of 1[atm], it may be that you evaluate your material properties at 1[atm]+0.4[mbar] rather than at 0.4[mbar].
[/QUOTE]
Yes indeed... I realize that I was not understanding correctly the role of the reference pressure level in the computation. I set it to 0.4 mbar which means that the actual pressure in the vessel was 0.8mbar instead of 0.4 hence the factor two in SPF.rho. I set it to the base pressure of my system 1e-8 [mbar] and it works now !
As I understand it know the reference pressure level is a pressure which is there indepedently of the computation. Then the computation "adds" or "remove" pressure based on the inlet and outlets of the system (correct me if I'm wrong..).
Thanks for educating me and sorry for this question that I should have solved myself..
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
8 years ago
30 déc. 2016, 05:30 UTC−5
Hi all
There is exactly a Blog on this subject just issued:
www.comsol.eu/blogs/how-to-assign-fluid-pressure-in-cfd-simulations/
COMSOL, as many Physics in general use "gauge values" for variables with large offset, such as the pressure and the temperatrure in SPF, magnetic fields in ACDC ...
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi all
There is exactly a Blog on this subject just issued:
https://www.comsol.eu/blogs/how-to-assign-fluid-pressure-in-cfd-simulations/
COMSOL, as many Physics in general use "gauge values" for variables with large offset, such as the pressure and the temperatrure in SPF, magnetic fields in ACDC ...
--
Good luck
Ivar
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Posted:
8 years ago
31 déc. 2016, 08:18 UTC−5
Very good thanks !
Alex
Very good thanks !
Alex