Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
21 juil. 2012, 04:18 UTC−4
Hi
charge you can estimate from voltage and capacitance, but as for power there is a d/dt component missing. Applying a force in stationary does not give any power it's time independent. and the poser depends on the load impedance. You need to define your model fully, i.e. with a CIR and then input some PSD or time varying / harmonic developpment values.
Sketc it out on a piece of paper before you try to set up the COMSOl model as it will depend on how you decide to masure power, viltage, current, charge ... or whatever. This is true multiphysics ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
charge you can estimate from voltage and capacitance, but as for power there is a d/dt component missing. Applying a force in stationary does not give any power it's time independent. and the poser depends on the load impedance. You need to define your model fully, i.e. with a CIR and then input some PSD or time varying / harmonic developpment values.
Sketc it out on a piece of paper before you try to set up the COMSOl model as it will depend on how you decide to masure power, viltage, current, charge ... or whatever. This is true multiphysics ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
23 juil. 2012, 01:13 UTC−4
Hi,
In order to obtain charge, you have to couple piezoelectric device physics with CIR. Add capacitance and then plot charge. If you do not do this, you will always get zero charge while you will still get some terminal voltage.
I think power can be plotted directly. Look at the post-processing options. I am sure that Comsol has total power and some gradient of power loss which you can integrate to get full power loss.
-Sankha
Hi,
In order to obtain charge, you have to couple piezoelectric device physics with CIR. Add capacitance and then plot charge. If you do not do this, you will always get zero charge while you will still get some terminal voltage.
I think power can be plotted directly. Look at the post-processing options. I am sure that Comsol has total power and some gradient of power loss which you can integrate to get full power loss.
-Sankha