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mass averaged pressure and area averaged pressure

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Old   February 9, 2012, 17:18
Default mass averaged pressure and area averaged pressure
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soni
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I have static pressure data at outlet of turbine from experiment.HOw do we calculate mass averaged or area averaged pressure for outlet BC in cfx?

I really need help on this!!!!!!
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Old   February 9, 2012, 19:28
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Darren Leong
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* using 'Outlet' as an example of the bc name

Create a table in 'Table Viewer' and use the following expression:
areaAve(Pressure)@Outlet

or

Use function calculator:
Function - areaAve
Location - Outlet
Variable - Pressure
Direction - None (set to global if you want to check in x,y,z direction)
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Old   February 12, 2012, 20:41
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Thanks Darren.It gave the Area Avg static pressure at the outlet.But the value of torque didn't change.Shouldn't CFX recalculate the values once we change static pressure into area average??

Also,How do we plot performance curve of a turbine.For example if we have to plot RPM Vs Power,do we have to run lot of simulations to plot the curve?
Also,How do we address cavitation in the simulation?


I really need a help!!
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Old   February 13, 2012, 06:21
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Glenn Horrocks
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These are all post processing activities, so of course the torque did not change. Why did you expect it to change?

Read the documentation on the best practices guide for turbomachinery.

Cavitation - Do the tutorial on cavitation. But based on your questions I suspect you are new to CFD and I would recommend you not do cavitation modelling until you understand some of the basics. Cavitation modelling is very tricky to get working properly.
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Old   February 13, 2012, 15:50
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Thanks Glenn.I will do teh cavitation tutorials.But one question:In which cases do we model cavitation?Do we have to do in all teh cases?My values from CFD is not matching with EFD.I have not used cavitation model.SO can this be the reason?help me out Please.If you need more information plz ask me.I am stuck!!
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Old   February 13, 2012, 16:24
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If you don't even know when cavitation could be an issue then definitely do not use it. I repeat my previous comment - forget about cavitation modelling until you have a wider CFD experience.

What is EFD?

If your simulations are not accurate then try this FAQ: http://www.cfd-online.com/Wiki/Ansys..._inaccurate.3F
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Old   February 14, 2012, 12:41
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Thanks for the reply Glenn!My professor told me not to do with cavitation.I am using Experimental data.I have pressure at inlet,outlet,RPM and mass flow rate.I want to develop the performance curve of a turbine and validate with the experimental results.I used total pressure at inlet and static outlet pressure and used same RPM values of the experiment but my POwer Vs RPM curve does not follow the trend.As we increase the RPM,power increases and then decreases for a constant head.

Can you suggest me.
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Old   February 14, 2012, 16:37
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I have already made two suggestions:
Quote:
Read the documentation on the best practices guide for turbomachinery
and
Quote:
If your simulations are not accurate then try this FAQ: http://www.cfd-online.com/Wiki/Ansys..._inaccurate.3F
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