Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
30 janv. 2011, 03:25 UTC−5
Hi
I believe the down() operator is as before its the variable naming that has changed. Check the operators in the 4.1 COMSOL user guide p77 under "Special Operators"
its probably something like (if you have rebuild from scratch in v4)
fluxz_ht => ht.fluxz
Turn on the "equations view", see under Preferences to help to identify the new namings
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
I believe the down() operator is as before its the variable naming that has changed. Check the operators in the 4.1 COMSOL user guide p77 under "Special Operators"
its probably something like (if you have rebuild from scratch in v4)
fluxz_ht => ht.fluxz
Turn on the "equations view", see under Preferences to help to identify the new namings
--
Good luck
Ivar
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
2 févr. 2011, 16:14 UTC−5
Hi
I believe the down() operator is as before its the variable naming that has changed. Check the operators in the 4.1 COMSOL user guide p77 under "Special Operators"
its probably something like (if you have rebuild from scratch in v4)
fluxz_ht => ht.fluxz
Turn on the "equations view", see under Preferences to help to identify the new namings
--
Good luck
Ivar
Thank you, Ivar!
in v4, it is ht.dfluxz (I don't know why there is a "d" before fluxz)
What are these? built-in variables? Are there introductions about them in doc?
Thank you!
[QUOTE]
Hi
I believe the down() operator is as before its the variable naming that has changed. Check the operators in the 4.1 COMSOL user guide p77 under "Special Operators"
its probably something like (if you have rebuild from scratch in v4)
fluxz_ht => ht.fluxz
Turn on the "equations view", see under Preferences to help to identify the new namings
--
Good luck
Ivar
[/QUOTE]
Thank you, Ivar!
in v4, it is ht.dfluxz (I don't know why there is a "d" before fluxz)
What are these? built-in variables? Are there introductions about them in doc?
Thank you!
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
3 févr. 2011, 06:24 UTC−5
Hi
I'm not by my Comsol station (waiting for flight) so I cannot tell exactly, but if I rememer right you have the d&u flux terms. Index your pdf doc and try a serch, but I'm not sure that all variables have been written out yet in the doc, as they were in the 3.5a doc. Note 4.1 doc is far more precise than 4.0
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
I'm not by my Comsol station (waiting for flight) so I cannot tell exactly, but if I rememer right you have the d&u flux terms. Index your pdf doc and try a serch, but I'm not sure that all variables have been written out yet in the doc, as they were in the 3.5a doc. Note 4.1 doc is far more precise than 4.0
--
Good luck
Ivar
Magnus Ringh
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
1 decade ago
3 févr. 2011, 06:49 UTC−5
Hi,
To get a description and definition of a variable, check the Variables list in the Settings window for the Equation View node under the main Heat Transfer node (requires that the Equation View is activated from the View menu, which is the downward-pointing triangle in the upper-right corner of the Model Builder window):
ht.dfluxz is the "Conductive heat flux, z component".
In general, the "d" prefix is for conductive heat flux, the "a" prefix is for the convective (advective) heat flux, and the "t" prefix is for the total heat flux (essentially the sum of the convective and conductive heat fluxes).
Best regards,
Magnus Ringh, COMSOL
Hi,
To get a description and definition of a variable, check the Variables list in the Settings window for the Equation View node under the main Heat Transfer node (requires that the Equation View is activated from the View menu, which is the downward-pointing triangle in the upper-right corner of the Model Builder window):
ht.dfluxz is the "Conductive heat flux, z component".
In general, the "d" prefix is for conductive heat flux, the "a" prefix is for the convective (advective) heat flux, and the "t" prefix is for the total heat flux (essentially the sum of the convective and conductive heat fluxes).
Best regards,
Magnus Ringh, COMSOL
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
3 févr. 2011, 13:08 UTC−5
Hi
Thanks Magnus, indeed the equations description is very usefull, could even be better if we could sort the variables alphabetically and copy the names to the clipboard to paste them further down in the postprocessing nodes
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
Thanks Magnus, indeed the equations description is very usefull, could even be better if we could sort the variables alphabetically and copy the names to the clipboard to paste them further down in the postprocessing nodes
--
Good luck
Ivar