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theta volocity in cylindrical coordinate

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Old   October 18, 2010, 22:35
Default theta volocity in cylindrical coordinate
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wuyu
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I am modeling a fluid impact on a cylinder. Therefore I set it in the cylindrical coordinate. The veloctiy at impact will be resolved into two components, radial and azimuthal velocity. Let's say velocity is 1 m/s, the fluid impacts on the cylinder, not through the circle center. Assume the angle is 30 degrees, the diameter of the cylinder is 1mm. Then the radial velocity is 0.86m/s, the azimuthal velocity is sin30/0.0005=10000 rad/s. But I found the fluid flew away from the computational domain within a quite short time. But physically it should impact on the cylinder. Is the velocity in y direction (theta) in a unit of radian/s?
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Old   October 23, 2010, 15:07
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michael barkhudarov
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I can't quite picture this in cylindrical coordinates. Where are you setting the inlet velocity?

Why not do it in a Cartesian grid?

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Originally Posted by seasoul View Post
I am modeling a fluid impact on a cylinder. Therefore I set it in the cylindrical coordinate. The veloctiy at impact will be resolved into two components, radial and azimuthal velocity. Let's say velocity is 1 m/s, the fluid impacts on the cylinder, not through the circle center. Assume the angle is 30 degrees, the diameter of the cylinder is 1mm. Then the radial velocity is 0.86m/s, the azimuthal velocity is sin30/0.0005=10000 rad/s. But I found the fluid flew away from the computational domain within a quite short time. But physically it should impact on the cylinder. Is the velocity in y direction (theta) in a unit of radian/s?
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Old   October 31, 2010, 04:02
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I am actually modeling a droplet, so there is no inlet velocity issue. And I want to postprocess the data close to the cylinder surface, if in cartesian coordinate, is it possible to create a slice parallel to the curvature surface?
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Old   October 31, 2010, 23:49
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seasoul View Post
I am actually modeling a droplet, so there is no inlet velocity issue. And I want to postprocess the data close to the cylinder surface, if in cartesian coordinate, is it possible to create a slice parallel to the curvature surface?
Yes, that what an 2D plot in an y-z plane in the Analyze tab would do.

If you are trying to define an initial uniform droplet velocity moving towards the cylindrical axis, I don't think you can do it using the available input in FLOW-3D (if understand your problem). It is much easier in a Cartesian grid.
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