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Posted:
1 decade ago
6 janv. 2014, 01:45 UTC−5
for magnetic field analysis you have to choose the stationary or time dependent based on your application.
you can see the tutorial file which is i enclosed here.It is easy to put the simulation for the magnetic field i.e magnetic flux density,potential,etc..
all the best
for magnetic field analysis you have to choose the stationary or time dependent based on your application.
you can see the tutorial file which is i enclosed here.It is easy to put the simulation for the magnetic field i.e magnetic flux density,potential,etc..
all the best
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
4 août 2014, 17:15 UTC−4
Hi,
I have exactly the same problem. Do you have more straight model or any basic help or advice? I just want to start it and actually I don't know even which module I should use.
I really appreciate your help.
Best,
Mohad
Hi,
I have exactly the same problem. Do you have more straight model or any basic help or advice? I just want to start it and actually I don't know even which module I should use.
I really appreciate your help.
Best,
Mohad
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
6 août 2014, 12:35 UTC−4
I'm relatively new to comsol as well, so I probably can't answer this question directly, but support did recently point me to this blog post that might help out with questions of this nature:
www.comsol.com/blogs/computational-electromagnetics-modeling-which-module-to-use/
I'm thinking your answer is in the AC/DC Module, and that any of these interfaces might work:
AC/DC Module, Magnetic & Electric Fields Interface
AC/DC Module, Magnetic Fields Interface, Frequency Domain Solution (retains displacement current in equations)
Maybe the Electric Currents interface, as well.
Unfortunately, I ran into troubles in each case with getting sources/boundary conditions to work. Expect to stumble around for a while until you figure out how each interface likes to have its domains/boundaries/sources/etc. defined in both the materials and physics sections.
Also, I have no clue as to why Kumar attached an engineering master's report on fluid dynamics and heat transfer in response to the original question. Granted, that report does include magnetohydrodynamics which encompasses the necessary Maxwell's equations... but that doesn't seem very useful as a COMSOL tutorial for this far simpler problem.
I'm relatively new to comsol as well, so I probably can't answer this question directly, but support did recently point me to this blog post that might help out with questions of this nature:
http://www.comsol.com/blogs/computational-electromagnetics-modeling-which-module-to-use/
I'm thinking your answer is in the AC/DC Module, and that any of these interfaces might work:
AC/DC Module, Magnetic & Electric Fields Interface
AC/DC Module, Magnetic Fields Interface, Frequency Domain Solution (retains displacement current in equations)
Maybe the Electric Currents interface, as well.
Unfortunately, I ran into troubles in each case with getting sources/boundary conditions to work. Expect to stumble around for a while until you figure out how each interface likes to have its domains/boundaries/sources/etc. defined in both the materials and physics sections.
Also, I have no clue as to why Kumar attached an engineering master's report on fluid dynamics and heat transfer in response to the original question. Granted, that report does include magnetohydrodynamics which encompasses the necessary Maxwell's equations... but that doesn't seem very useful as a COMSOL tutorial for this far simpler problem.