Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
4 years ago
29 déc. 2020, 14:48 UTC−5
Updated:
4 years ago
29 déc. 2020, 14:48 UTC−5
Caveat: I'm just making a wild guess here, and your model may have other issues, but... In regard to Intop1, where it says Geometric entity level, I see that you have selected Boundary. Consider clicking the little down arrow there and choose Domain instead. And then select the appropriate domain(s), which in a 3D problem, are generally volume(s). Good luck.
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Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
Caveat: I'm just making a wild guess here, and your model may have other issues, but... In regard to Intop1, where it says **Geometric entity level**, I see that you have selected *Boundary*. Consider clicking the little down arrow there and choose *Domain* instead. And then select the appropriate domain(s), which in a 3D problem, are generally volume(s). Good luck.
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Posted:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 02:27 UTC−5
Updated:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 02:28 UTC−5
Caveat: I'm just making a wild guess here, and your model may have other issues, but... In regard to Intop1, where it says Geometric entity level, I see that you have selected Boundary. Consider clicking the little down arrow there and choose Domain instead. And then select the appropriate domain(s), which in a 3D problem, are generally volume(s). Good luck.
Dear Dr. Koslover,
Thank you for responding to my question. Unfortunately, the part that I want to compute the volume is boundary and if I specify Geometry Entity Level as domain the interested parts cannot be selected. Also, in regard to your Caveat what do you mean by other issues in my model?
I am new in COMSOL and appreciate any help,
Thank you
>Caveat: I'm just making a wild guess here, and your model may have other issues, but... In regard to Intop1, where it says **Geometric entity level**, I see that you have selected *Boundary*. Consider clicking the little down arrow there and choose *Domain* instead. And then select the appropriate domain(s), which in a 3D problem, are generally volume(s). Good luck.
Dear Dr. Koslover,
Thank you for responding to my question. Unfortunately, the part that I want to compute the volume is boundary and if I specify Geometry Entity Level as domain the interested parts cannot be selected. Also, in regard to your Caveat what do you mean by other issues in my model?
I am new in COMSOL and appreciate any help,
Thank you
Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 10:50 UTC−5
Updated:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 10:51 UTC−5
You might want to upload your model to the forum. If you cannot select the domain(s) for which you want to compute the volume, then this hints to me that you have created a surface model, not a a volume model. I'm an RF guy and I don't really know anything about how to model a heart, but it seems strange to me that you wouldn't include the enclosed volume as part of your computational domain. Did you exclude it by accident? Are you, perhaps, trying to model the heart without including any of the blood within it? Even so, it should have a thickness to it. If your model includes surfaces but no domains, then you have not defined your geometry properly. Hmm. By some chance, did you create your geometry with a different tool and then import it into Comsol Multiphysics? If so, the format and import process could have thrown away your volumes and left only surfaces. And that would be a problem. But I'm just guessing, so I suggest you upload your model to the forum so others can take a look at it.
-------------------
Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
You might want to upload your model to the forum. If you cannot select the domain(s) for which you want to compute the volume, then this hints to me that you have created a surface model, not a a volume model. I'm an RF guy and I don't really know anything about how to model a heart, but it seems strange to me that you wouldn't include the enclosed volume as part of your computational domain. Did you exclude it by accident? Are you, perhaps, trying to model the heart without including any of the blood within it? Even so, it should have a thickness to it. If your model includes surfaces but no domains, then you have not defined your geometry properly. Hmm. By some chance, did you create your geometry with a different tool and then *import* it into Comsol Multiphysics? If so, the format and import process could have thrown away your volumes and left only surfaces. And that would be a problem. But I'm just guessing, so I suggest you upload your model to the forum so others can take a look at it.
Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 12:51 UTC−5
Updated:
4 years ago
4 janv. 2021, 10:28 UTC−5
Bottom line: an open surface does not define a volume. A closed one does and that volume can be computed by a surface integral via Gauss's theorem (a.k.a. the divergence theorem). You can go that route if you first ensure your cavity forms a closed boundary; this does not seem to be currently the case judging by the screenshot you attached earlier.
Jeff
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Jeff Hiller
Bottom line: an open surface does not define a volume. A closed one does and that volume can be computed by a surface integral via Gauss's theorem (a.k.a. the divergence theorem). You can go that route if you first ensure your cavity forms a closed boundary; this does not seem to be currently the case judging by the screenshot you attached earlier.
Jeff
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Posted:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 14:04 UTC−5
You might want to upload your model to the forum. If you cannot select the domain(s) for which you want to compute the volume, then this hints to me that you have created a surface model, not a a volume model. I'm an RF guy and I don't really know anything about how to model a heart, but it seems strange to me that you wouldn't include the enclosed volume as part of your computational domain. Did you exclude it by accident? Are you, perhaps, trying to model the heart without including any of the blood within it? Even so, it should have a thickness to it. If your model includes surfaces but no domains, then you have not defined your geometry properly. Hmm. By some chance, did you create your geometry with a different tool and then import it into Comsol Multiphysics? If so, the format and import process could have thrown away your volumes and left only surfaces. And that would be a problem. But I'm just guessing, so I suggest you upload your model to the forum so others can take a look at it.
My geometry has one domain and that is the whole geometry, I have created the geometry from medical images in a software named MIMICS and then imported the IGES format of the geometry to COMSOL Multiphysics. As you can see from the picture (Geometry) that is attached, my model has volume and it is not a surface model. I am trying to model the heart without including any of the blood within it and the effect of the blood is considered by a time varying pressure load over the cavities.
>You might want to upload your model to the forum. If you cannot select the domain(s) for which you want to compute the volume, then this hints to me that you have created a surface model, not a a volume model. I'm an RF guy and I don't really know anything about how to model a heart, but it seems strange to me that you wouldn't include the enclosed volume as part of your computational domain. Did you exclude it by accident? Are you, perhaps, trying to model the heart without including any of the blood within it? Even so, it should have a thickness to it. If your model includes surfaces but no domains, then you have not defined your geometry properly. Hmm. By some chance, did you create your geometry with a different tool and then *import* it into Comsol Multiphysics? If so, the format and import process could have thrown away your volumes and left only surfaces. And that would be a problem. But I'm just guessing, so I suggest you upload your model to the forum so others can take a look at it.
My geometry has one domain and that is the whole geometry, I have created the geometry from medical images in a software named MIMICS and then imported the IGES format of the geometry to COMSOL Multiphysics. As you can see from the picture (Geometry) that is attached, my model has volume and it is not a surface model. I am trying to model the heart without including any of the blood within it and the effect of the blood is considered by a time varying pressure load over the cavities.
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Posted:
4 years ago
30 déc. 2020, 14:18 UTC−5
Bottom line: an open surface does not define a volume. A closed one does and that volume can be computed by a surface integral via Gauss's theorem.
Jeff
via Gauss's theorem.
Dear jeff
In this book https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-642-54801-7 in Chapter 8 Problems, mentioned an expression for surface integral via Gauss's theorem that computes the volume of cavity boundaries for a 2-Dimensional axisymmetric geometry in COMSOL Multiphysics but in my case the geometry is 3-Dimensional and that expression doesn’t work.
Is there any other way that I can compute the volume of the cavity?
Thank you
>Bottom line: an open surface does not define a volume. A closed one does and that volume can be computed by a surface integral via Gauss's theorem.
>
>Jeff
>via Gauss's theorem.
Dear jeff
In this book https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-642-54801-7 in Chapter 8 Problems, mentioned an expression for surface integral via Gauss's theorem that computes the volume of cavity boundaries for a 2-Dimensional axisymmetric geometry in COMSOL Multiphysics but in my case the geometry is 3-Dimensional and that expression doesn’t work.
Is there any other way that I can compute the volume of the cavity?
Thank you