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Modelling mixing tank using MRF

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Old   June 18, 2006, 03:40
Default Modelling mixing tank using MRF
  #1
Adi
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Hi,

I am using MRF to model a baffled mixing tank. The boundari conditions that I used are

- no-slip, stationary wall for top, bottom and tank wall

- no-slip, moving wall for impeller and shaft

- interior for the boundary between moving and stationary zones

- 1 pair periodics for moving zones and 1 pair periodics for stationary zone

I got a very nice vector plot, and I think the direction is right. But the problem is the maximum velocity is 20% higher than the impeller tip speed and become worse when I double the cell number (using grid adaption - boundary) and using second order discretization scheme. I also found that the maximum velocity occured behind the impeller blade, not in the tip of impeller.

Could anyone please help me? Thank you
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Old   June 18, 2006, 15:20
Default Re: Modelling mixing tank using MRF
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ozgur
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hi,

Shouldn't you define the interface btw moving & stationary zones as "interface" b.c.? I do so for sliding mesh and mrf calculations.

is it the tangential velocity that you are talking about?

ozgur
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Old   October 31, 2009, 08:38
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Shu-xin Cui
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I think the problem is due to settting as below
"no-slip, moving wall for impeller and shaft"
you should fix the impeller and shaft with the rotating zone!
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Old   November 3, 2009, 06:38
Default hello
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reza
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i have a software that used for mixing tank if u want tell to send it for you
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Old   November 3, 2009, 07:13
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Thank you for your enthusiasm!
I expect the software you mentioned, though I'm not working this now.
could you send it to the email below?
cuishuxin1234@yahoo.com.cn
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Old   November 3, 2009, 23:09
Default Rotating wall BC
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Sowmya K
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I'm trying to model a washing machine in Fluent.
Geometry: circular drum, 1 inlet and outlet.
I'm trying to specify a rotating wall boundary condition. However, I'm struggling to use MRF. If anyone can explain this with an example, I would really appreciate that.

Also, I'm doing a particle tracking (injecting soap) to see how much of the soap sticks to the clothes as opposed to how much exits without interacting with the clothes. I have clothes turned on as 'sticky, escape wall' condition. However, when I do a particle track-dpm-from vel inlet. How can I find out the mass/number of the particles sticking to the clothes? The summary report only gives me total mass injected (not total mass exiting the domain.)

Any help (especially on the latter) is highly appreciated. Thanks
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Old   November 4, 2009, 00:28
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About the first question, the wall's velocity should be zero relative to adjacent cell zone if you use MRF. Otherwise, you may also use the rotating wall without MRF.
Because it needs to resolve the equation in the relative reference frame by using MRF, so the wall is stationary relative to the relative reference frame. while carrying out the rotating wall, it is actually that the sheer velocity is set the values as specified in the stationary N-S equation. Also Note that you cannot use the moving wall condition to model problems where the wall has a motion normal to itself. FLUENT will neglect any normal component of wall motion that you specify using the methods below.

About the second question, you may choose different surfaces to show the mass flow.
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