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Posted:
1 decade ago
31 janv. 2014, 03:54 UTC−5
Hi
Select Domain instead of Entire model when meshing. See attached picture.
BR
Lasse
Hi
Select Domain instead of Entire model when meshing. See attached picture.
BR
Lasse
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Posted:
1 decade ago
31 janv. 2014, 03:57 UTC−5
Sorry, I replied to a question you did not ask ;)
Sorry, I replied to a question you did not ask ;)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
31 janv. 2014, 06:47 UTC−5
Hi Lasse, thank you for the reply.
But yes can anyone explain how to refine a mesh in a specific part of a domain instead of the entire domain?
Hi Lasse, thank you for the reply.
But yes can anyone explain how to refine a mesh in a specific part of a domain instead of the entire domain?
Magnus Ringh
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
1 decade ago
31 janv. 2014, 08:03 UTC−5
Hi,
I think you are on the right track but that you might have misinterpreted the mesh visualization in 3D, which only shows the surface mesh. If you add a sphere inside a block as a mesh control domain, and select it in a separate Free Tetrahedral node (for example) with its own Size subnode, and then add another Free Tetrahedral node to mesh the remaining geometry (that is, the part of the block surrounding the sphere), then the mesh in the sphere can be finer (or coarser). You may want to turn off the "Smooth across removed control entities" check box in the settings for the Free Tetrahedral node for the remaining geometry if you want to have a more distinct difference between the mesh sizes at either side of the boundary between the domains. It's also useful to add a Mesh plot to a 3D Plot Group, perhaps with a filter to include only some of the mesh elements. See the attached screen shot for an example.
Best regards,
Magnus Ringh, COMSOL
Hi,
I think you are on the right track but that you might have misinterpreted the mesh visualization in 3D, which only shows the surface mesh. If you add a sphere inside a block as a mesh control domain, and select it in a separate Free Tetrahedral node (for example) with its own Size subnode, and then add another Free Tetrahedral node to mesh the remaining geometry (that is, the part of the block surrounding the sphere), then the mesh in the sphere can be finer (or coarser). You may want to turn off the "Smooth across removed control entities" check box in the settings for the Free Tetrahedral node for the remaining geometry if you want to have a more distinct difference between the mesh sizes at either side of the boundary between the domains. It's also useful to add a Mesh plot to a 3D Plot Group, perhaps with a filter to include only some of the mesh elements. See the attached screen shot for an example.
Best regards,
Magnus Ringh, COMSOL
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Posted:
1 decade ago
31 janv. 2014, 23:56 UTC−5
Hi Magnus,
Thank you for your reply, the screenshot is exactly what I am trying to achieve. I assume the sphere originally protruded out of the block and then disappeared when it was made a mesh control domain? However when I try to make the sphere a mesh control domain, it does not work (as described in my first post). The sphere remains as a solid piece of geometry being modelled.
Thanks for any help.
Hi Magnus,
Thank you for your reply, the screenshot is exactly what I am trying to achieve. I assume the sphere originally protruded out of the block and then disappeared when it was made a mesh control domain? However when I try to make the sphere a mesh control domain, it does not work (as described in my first post). The sphere remains as a solid piece of geometry being modelled.
Thanks for any help.
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2 févr. 2014, 18:33 UTC−5
Can you use a mesh control domain to refine a mesh within a domain without the mesh control domain contributing to the actual geometry?
See attached picture as an example: I want to refine the mesh in my square object. I have used a circular mesh control domain, which seems to work if the circle is completely enclosed by the square, but if the circle is outside the square then the domain outside the square is meshed like it is part of the actual geometry (which it is not). Obviously it is easy in this example to control the mesh with better geometry of a mesh control domain, but I am trying to understand how to control the mesh in a complex 3D model.
Is this just not possible with a mesh control domain? Then how do you control the mesh within a complex 3D domain (without refining the entire domain)?
Thanks for any help.
Can you use a mesh control domain to refine a mesh within a domain without the mesh control domain contributing to the actual geometry?
See attached picture as an example: I want to refine the mesh in my square object. I have used a circular mesh control domain, which seems to work if the circle is completely enclosed by the square, but if the circle is outside the square then the domain outside the square is meshed like it is part of the actual geometry (which it is not). Obviously it is easy in this example to control the mesh with better geometry of a mesh control domain, but I am trying to understand how to control the mesh in a complex 3D model.
Is this just not possible with a mesh control domain? Then how do you control the mesh within a complex 3D domain (without refining the entire domain)?
Thanks for any help.