CFD Online Logo CFD Online URL
www.cfd-online.com
[Sponsors]
Home > Forums > General Forums > Main CFD Forum

Streamline BC on surfaces

Register Blogs Community New Posts Updated Threads Search

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old   March 14, 2002, 13:52
Default Streamline BC on surfaces
  #1
Frank
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Hi there,

I need your help on the following question:

I have got the velocity field for the flow past a few randomly placed cylinders (in 2D). I want draw the streamlines by solving the Poisson equation. The BC for the inlet is easy, simply integrating the velocity. However, I do not know how to set the BC on the cylinder surfaces. I will be thankful if somebody can show me how.

Thanks

Frank
  Reply With Quote

Old   March 15, 2002, 04:15
Default Re: Streamline BC on surfaces
  #2
Richard
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
By convention one sets the streamfunction to zero on solid surfaces. This ensures that streamlines (iso-lines of the streamfunction) are locally parallel to the solid surface.
  Reply With Quote

Old   March 15, 2002, 09:56
Default Re: Streamline BC on surfaces
  #3
Frank
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Thanks for your reply. Should I set zero to all surfaces? Streamfunctions is constant on solid surfaces but might be different values. I just do not know how to get these values. Any idea?

  Reply With Quote

Old   March 20, 2002, 20:13
Default Re: Streamline BC on surfaces
  #4
Jonas Holdeman
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
The stream function is constant on each no-flow surface. If there is a single, connected surface such as the lid-driven cavity problem, there is one constant which can be chosen to be zero. If there are two surfaces such as in duct flow, the stream function is constant on each surface, but the difference in the constants is equal to the flow through the duct, as you remarked.

If there is a single cylinder, the stream function value on the cylinder determines the fraction of flow to the left vs. the right (it could even be greater (or less) than either boundary surface if the fluid was swirling around the cylinder such as would be the case if the cylinder were spinning).

For your problem, I would assign some convenient value at one surface, then evaluate a line integral of the velocity component perpendicular to the line from the initial surface to each of the other (cylindrical)surfaces, just as you would do at the inlet, to evaluate the constant for that surface.
  Reply With Quote

Old   March 21, 2002, 11:41
Default Re: Streamline BC on surfaces
  #5
Frank
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Hi Jonas,

Thanks for your reply. The values of streamline function on the cylinder surfaces are constant. But are they time dependant? Since some of the stagnation points on the cylinders may vary with time in my case, say, one cylinder is placed in the wake of another one.

I can prescribe values at the inlet, find the stagnation points on the cylinders and trace back their characteristic roots at the inlet. But this procedure is very time-consuming and has to be done at every time step. I am wondering if there is any more efficient way.

Thanks again.

  Reply With Quote

Old   April 4, 2002, 19:01
Default Re: Streamline BC on surfaces
  #6
Jonas Holdeman
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Frank said: The values of streamline function on the cylinder surfaces are constant. But are they time dependant? Since some of the stagnation points on the cylinders may vary with time in my case, say, one cylinder is placed in the wake of another one.

As you suggested, the stream function on the cylinders may be a function of time, especially in the case of a cylinder in the wake of another. Using the procedure of recovering the stream function from the flow field, perhaps you could assume values, do a fit, and then look for new values which would reduce the error in the fit by a search. One might vary the values and look at the change in fit/error, then choose new values based on the differences.

Yes, there may be a better way, depending on how the flow field was computed. Using the finite element method, the problem might be solved using a particular type of Hermite element, which has the stream function and velocity components (dPsi/dy and -dPsi/dx) as degrees of freedom. The velocity elements are the curl of a stream function element. The stream function can be found for visualization by interpolating the solution with the stream function element.

The form of the element on a rectangle can be found in a classic test by Zienkiewicz disguised as a plate element (you have to fix up the normalization). The derivative degrees of freedom must be interchanged and a sign changed (d/dx, d/dy -> d/dy, -d/dx). Then take the curl of the element to get the velocity element. The velocity element is divergence-free and has sufficient continuity that the divergence vanishes on the boundary as well.

I haven't explained how to transform to a general quadrilateral, but this works for me.

Jonas
  Reply With Quote

Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
how to get forces on Iso-Clip Surfaces and How to get forces in cylindrical coordinat CFD XUE FLUENT 3 March 18, 2015 03:28
streamline plot for multiphase problem lionlove0903 OpenFOAM Post-Processing 2 March 14, 2011 15:25
Exporting surfaces inside the control volume (interior) bigmoneylou ANSYS Meshing & Geometry 1 January 8, 2011 16:16
Faceted surfaces in ICEM Chriss Main CFD Forum 1 May 6, 2008 15:18
Surfaces Mark FLUENT 2 February 9, 2004 10:41


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 22:03.