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[Sponsors] |
February 21, 2006, 06:06 |
desorption/evaporation
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#1 |
Guest
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hi is enyone fimilliar with dessorption proces?? If yes can you give me any suggestions? Whcich model dod you use? Any UDF?? REgards Grzesiek
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February 21, 2006, 12:49 |
Re: desorption/evaporation
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#2 |
Guest
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call your support engineer
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February 21, 2006, 13:56 |
Re: desorption/evaporation
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#3 |
Guest
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hi hi hi hi he he he my support engineer doesn`t know the differences beetwen dessorption and evaporation
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February 23, 2006, 06:36 |
Re: desorption/evaporation
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#4 |
Guest
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So your support engineer does not know, and you are solving a problem that you do not understand? A nice situation? Good Luck
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February 23, 2006, 11:32 |
Re: desorption/evaporation
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#5 |
Guest
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I didn`t say I don`t understand a problem. I said that I don`t know Fluent well. It is a big different...but the result is the same . I hope I will be so skilled like you are...someday
Best wishes |
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February 25, 2006, 11:14 |
Re: desorption/evaporation
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#6 |
Guest
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So you have reduced the problem to knowledge of few mouse clicks. What stops you from reading the User's guide and other documents on your help system. Wrong path my friend. The programme is just a tool to solve a problem you have formulated. Ask yourself the following:- 1- What are the physical laws that need to be solved in order to get the results you are looking for? 2- What are the boundary conditions? When you know the answer to these two questions then you can call your (ignorant) support engineer (Assuming you are using Legal Software). For your information, I have had several years of experience calling the support engineers at FLUENT, and I can tell you one fact, They are real professionals.
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