Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
5 years ago
9 mars 2020, 11:30 UTC−4
In most cases, that would not form a well-posed problem. The question here is: What condition is to be applied on the boundaries adjacent to that edge?
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Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL
In most cases, that would not form a well-posed problem. The question here is: What condition is to be applied on the boundaries adjacent to that edge?
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Posted:
5 years ago
11 mars 2020, 05:40 UTC−4
Thanks for reply.
If we assume that the problem is well posed, can you indicate which system-variables can be used to move an edge?
Thanks for reply.
If we assume that the problem is well posed, can you indicate which system-variables can be used to move an edge?
Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
5 years ago
11 mars 2020, 09:56 UTC−4
In principle, it should be possible to put a pointwise (or weak) constraint on material.u, material.v, etc. (In the Dependent Variables node, you can see the names of the degrees of freedom for the mesh displacement).
Such a setting will, however, usually conflict with boundary conditions (explicit or implicit) on the adjacent boundaries. Unless you know exactly what is going on under the hood, chances are rather large that you will get unexpected results. In particular, a boundary without other boundary conditions is implicitly fixed.
Try it out on a small simple example if you still want to explore this path.
-------------------
Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL
In principle, it should be possible to put a pointwise (or weak) constraint on *material.u*, *material.v*, etc. (In the Dependent Variables node, you can see the names of the degrees of freedom for the mesh displacement).
Such a setting will, however, usually conflict with boundary conditions (explicit or implicit) on the adjacent boundaries. Unless you know exactly what is going on under the hood, chances are rather large that you will get unexpected results. In particular, a boundary without other boundary conditions is implicitly fixed.
Try it out on a small simple example if you still want to explore this path.